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Manufacturing

North East automotive supply chain woes as chip shortages and Covid fallout continues to bite

Several of the region's biggest car component manufacturers have reported downbeat results in recent days

Gestamp's base in Newton Aycliffe(Image: -Newcastle Journal)

Semiconductor chip shortages, lingering Covid disruption and spiralling costs continued to weigh on the North East's automotive supply chain industry, new documents show.

A trio of the region's top suppliers to Nissan, among other manufacturers, are yet to regain pre-pandemic revenues as the automotive sector continues to face serious headwinds. Newton Aycliffe's Gestamp Tallent, Washington's Kasai º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and Eaglescliffe-based Nifco have all revealed new financials in recent days.

Chassis maker Gestamp reported a £41.m dip in turnover to £305.1m in the year to the end of December 2021, citing Covid and semiconductor supplies as the major factors for the decline. Directors at the County Durham firm said they expected chip shortages and disruption caused by the war in Ukraine to continue to hamper sales this year, suggesting they would also be below pre-pandemic levels.

Read more: Vertu Motors to aid customers in cost-of-living crisis after posting profit fall in half year results

Francisco Riberas Mera, a director at Gestamp, said the business was taking steps to protect itself amid the economic uncertainty and said measures stretched as far as voluntary pay reductions for some staff, a banked hours scheme for employees and cost reductions sought from some of its suppliers. At the same time, operating losses at the Spanish-owned subsidiary narrowed from £23.7m to £17m.

Meanwhile, Washington-based Kasai º£½ÇÊÓÆµ said it expected the semiconductor problem to continue suppressing sales from its two major customers, Nissan and Jaguar Land Rover (JLR). The Japanese-owned component maker described an "extremely difficult trading year" in 2021 as car production across the sector fell to its lowest level since the mid-1950s.

Kasai narrowed operating losses from £7.6m to £5.2m during the period thanks to £9m of tooling sales for the new model of Nissan Qashqai being built at the neighbouring Washington plant. However, overall sales to Nissan were down 17% year-on-year with volumes for the new, more expensive, Qashqai being below expected levels and a lag between changeover from production of the previous model.

Nissan Juke volumes were down due to semiconductor shortages though Leaf volumes increased as the manufacturer allocated more chips to its electric model - a move which can help it meet production targets. Overall turnover for the firm - which also includes its now closed Methyr plant - increased 24.6% to £66.6m, but still well below 2019's levels of £88.5m.