Off-Prem

Edge + IoT

Planning on buying a new motor? Chip shortages set to hit UK carmakers this year and next

Here in my car, I feel safest of all...


The global chip shortage is likely to have an impact throughout this year and into 2023, affecting some sectors worse than others, with UK car sales likely to be one of those hit.

According to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), the UK car market continued to be plagued by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic during 2021.

New car registrations were up just 1 per cent over 2020, although battery electric vehicles (BEVs) represented 11.6 per cent of all sales, an increase of 76 percent on the previous year.

While many employees working from home is likely to be reducing demand for new vehicles, a shortage of the chips used in modern automobiles is also playing a major part, according to the SMMT.

Why did automakers stall while the PC supply chain coped with a surge? Because Big Tech got priority access

READ MORE

Mike Hawes, SMMT chief executive, said that car manufacturers are facing numerous challenges, including tougher trading arrangements and accelerating technology shifts, but it is the global semiconductor shortage above all else which is impacting on the vehicle supply chain.

"We think demand is still there and demand is still strong," Hawes told Reuters, adding that it was expected in the industry that the chip shortage would undermine vehicle sales during course of 2022 and this would "flow through to 2023".

One of the reasons why car manufacturers have been so badly hit is that they reduced their orders for chips in response to falling demand for new vehicles. This coincided with a surge in demand for new computers as people began working remotely and so the semiconductor producers gave priority to servicing that market instead, as The Register previously reported.

However, the situation appears to be changing, and manufacturers in the autonomous vehicle sector are trying not to be caught out in the same way. Some are moving quickly to secure long-term supplies of the components needed for sensors and the AI-powered systems that are required to help a vehicle navigate a route to its destination while avoiding obstacles.

In fact, the tables might be turned as the automotive sector is now trying to build up its inventory levels so they have headroom to cover any future dips in supply of the components they need.

This may lead to a shortage of computer chips as semiconductor vendors use their capacity to meet this demand, according to Manoj Sukumaran, principal analyst for data centre, compute, and networking at Omdia.

The automotive sector has traditionally operated on a just-in-time (JIT) supply model with very low levels of inventory, Sukumaran said, but some companies are now aiming to hold as much as six months' worth of stock.

"Customers across market segments are increasing or planning to increase their inventory levels for critical semiconductor components, and this could lead to an uneven supply situation. For example, the automotive vendors are planning to increase their inventory levels to four to six months to avoid any supply disruptions," he said.

While the type of components used for automotive are different from those in consumer or other market segments, chipmakers prioritising the manufacturing of automotive components could create supply constraint in other segments, especially with components like power management ICs (PMICs), he added.

PMIC shortage adversely affected the data centre server, storage, and networking equipment vendors in the second half of 2021, but some new fabrication capacity has already come online to address this, and overall Sukumaran thinks the semiconductor shortage situation will improve towards the second half of 2022.

But he warned that demand for semiconductor components remains very strong across consumer electronics, datacentre, automotive and industrial market segments, with little spare capacity for any increase in demand.

Meanwhile, there is also concern over the possible impact on the industry from a fire at ASML, which is a major supplier of the lithography equipment used in the manufacture of semiconductors. All in all, 2022 looks set to be an uncertain time for the chip market. ®

Send us news
13 Comments

China gorging on silicon before Uncle Sam slams the door

Chip imports up more than 14% this year in anticipation of fresh restrictions

Jury spares Qualcomm's AI PC ambitions, but Arm eyes a retrial

The victory may be short lived as the chip designer gears up for second round

Intel sued again over struggling foundry business

Derivatives claim seeks damages from execs and board members

Jury trial kicks off Arm's wrestling match with Qualcomm

The Nuvia buyer's alleged violations of license terms expected to last through Friday

Intel execs discuss the possibility of spinning off foundry

'Does it ever fully separate? I think that's an open question for another day,' interim co-CEO says

Cruise shutdown blastzone increases – Microsoft takes $800M charge

General Motors pulling the plug on autonomous taxi biz hits Redmond in the wallet

US Commerce Dept coughs up $6.1B Christmas present for Micron

Funding to support development of memory vendor's $125B fab expansion in New York and Idaho

Apple reportedly building AI server processor with help from Broadcom

Something called 'Baltra' expected to make its debut in 2026, perhaps with tech both already use

Intel turmoil prompts S&P Global to downgrade chipmaker's credit rating

Finance house finds x86 giant's lack of strategy disturbing

Cruise robotaxis parked forever, as GM decides it can't compete and wants to cut costs

The Register stumbles upon the place self-driving cabs appear to be rusting away into history

Tesla sued over alleged Autopilot fail in yet another fatal accident

With two legal wins and one secret settlement on the books, the odds are in the automaker's favor

Beijing wants Chinese outfits to seek alternatives to US silicon

And American components may be in short supply as Middle Kingdom bans rare earth exports