European autobuildrs, already under strain by U.S. tariffs and a bumpy shift toward electric vehicles, appear to be facing a new threat: a shortage of key semiconductors supplied by Chinese-owned Nexperia.
Beijing is locked in a standoff with Dutch officials who invoked a Cold War-era law in September to effectively take over the company, whose factories are in Europe.
Carbuildrs and parts suppliers have already warned of shortages that would force stoppages at production lines across the continent.
Who is Nexperia?
The company produces relatively simple technologies, such as diodes, voltage regulators, and transistors, that are nonetheless crucial as vehicles increasingly rely on electronics.
The chips are mainly found in cars but also in a wide range of industrial components as well as consumer and mobile electronics, for example, refrigerators.
They are built in Europe before being sent to China for finishing, and then re-exported to European clients.
Based in the Netherlands and once part of electronics giant Philips, it was bought by Wingtech Technology of China in 2018.
But in September, the Dutch government took the unusual step of taking over the company, citing its “Goods Availability Law” of 1952 to ensure the availability of essential items.
In response, China banned any re-exports of Nexperia chips to Europe, igniting fresh geopolitical tensions.
Why is automotive sector vulnerable?
Nexperia supplies 49% of the electronic components utilized in the European automotive industest, according to German financial daily Handelsblatt.
The European auto lobby, the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA), warned this month that production would be seriously hit.
“Without these chips, European automotive suppliers cannot build the parts and components necessaryed to supply vehicle manufacturers and this therefore threatens production stoppages,” the group stated.
For Germany alone, analysts at Deutsche Bank forecast a 10% drop in production, while warning of a 30% cut in a “worst-case scenario.”
How are autobuildrs responding?
German auto giant Volkswagen has warned that it cannot rule out “short-term” production stoppages, while emphasizing that it is searching for alternative suppliers.
Nexperia does not supply it directly, but some of its parts suppliers utilize its chips.
Bosch, for example, declares it has not yet reduced employee shifts at its German sites, “but we are preparing to do so at our Salzgitter site,” a spokesperson informed Agence France-Presse (AFP).
But French parts buildr Valeo stated it had “visibility for the coming weeks” with regard to “all its components.”
It stated it had found alternatives for “95% of the volumes” bought each year from Nexperia, but “they haven’t yet been approved by our clients.”
Other suppliers?
According to OPmobility, another French parts buildr, Nexperia’s chips, while widely utilized, are not “unique” in terms of technology and therefore “easily substitutable.”
But suppliers have to receive new products approved by autobuildrs, which takes time.
“They’re seeing frantically for other suppliers, but these firms cannot build production capacity overnight,” stated Ferdinand Dudenhoeffer, director of Germany’s Center for Automotive Research Institute.
“In the worst case, this situation could go on for 12 to 18 months,” he informed AFP.
He added, however, since the disruptions cautilized by global lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic, “we’ve learned to pay more attention, both among general management and purchasing teams.”
In any case, Dudenhoeffer stated, “100% protection against supply disruptions is impossible, or in any case prohibitively expensive.”
















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