Carmakers Warn of US Disruptions from Nexperia Chip Conflict
By Reuters | 16 Oct, 2025
US and Netherlands interference with operations of the Chinese Dutch chipmaker could soon cause stoppages at US auto assembly lines, says auto industry group.
The Nexperia NXS010PW-Q100J is the kind of relatively simple chips essential to the production of numerous brands of autos. (Nexperia photo)
A group representing major automakers warned late on Thursday that a chip disruption stemming from a dispute between China and the Dutch government could quickly impact U.S. auto production.
Carmakers and their suppliers received notice from chipmaker Nexperia last week that it could no longer guarantee delivery of its chips, said ACEA, the European Union's auto association, which also said manufacturing could be significantly disrupted.
In the United States, the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents General Motors, Toyota, Ford, Volkswagen, Hyundai, and nearly all other major automakers, urged a quick resolution.
"If the shipment of automotive chips doesn’t resume – quickly – it’s going to disrupt auto production in the U.S. and many other countries and have a spillover effect in other industries," said the group's CEO John Bozzella. "It’s that significant."
Some automakers told Reuters that U.S. auto plants could be affected as soon as next month. They declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.
The chips made by Nexperia are crucial to production of U.S. parts and vehicles.
The Dutch government announced on Sunday that it had as of September 30 taken control of Chinese-owned computer chipmaker Nexperia, citing worries about the possible transfer of technology to Nexperia's Chinese parent company, Wingtech.
Court documents showed the Dutch government's move came after months of rising U.S. pressure on the company. Nexperia was at risk of being impacted by a new U.S. rule that extends export control restrictions to companies at least 50% owned by one or more entities on the U.S. entity list.
Washington put Wingtech, which has 100% ownership of Nexperia, on the U.S. list in late December.
The Chinese commerce ministry issued on October 4 an export control notice prohibiting Nexperia China and its subcontractors from exporting specific finished components and sub-assemblies manufactured in China, according to a statement Nexperia published on Tuesday.
Volkswagen and BMW both said production in Europe had not yet been impacted by the issues but that they were working to identify potential supply risks.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Sonali Paul)
Articles
- World's 25 Most Polluted Cities All in India, Pakistan and China
- Flight Cancellation Spread Across Globe on Mideast Hub Closures
- S. Korea Calls for Nationwide Campaign to Conserve Fuel
- Vietnam Airlines Cancels Flights Due to Jet Fuel Shortage
- Alibaba's 5-nm Agentic AI Chip Unveiled As World's Most Powerful RISC-VCPU
- What's Ro Khanna's Angle with Thomas Massie?
- Top 5 Date Turn-Offs for Women and Men
- Demand Builds for Affordable Chinese EVs Among American Carbuyers
- OpenAI Bumps Up Minimum Return to 17.5% in Competition with Anthropic for Private Equity
- China's Open-Source AI Dominates Global Downloads, Threatens US Leadership
