Ford Motor Co. factories absorbed the biggest blows in North America last week from the global shortage of microchips.
Ford accounted for nearly 44,000 vehicles in AutoForecast Solutions’ latest tally of cars and trucks that have been removed from production schedules. That included more than 24,000 F-Series pickups, the bestselling vehicle in the United States.
Here are highlights for the week through April 2:
Ford:
- Dearborn, Mich. (F-Series): 13,700
- Louisville, Ky. (Escape, Corsair): 11,700
- Kansas City 2 (F-Series): 10,400
- Oakville, Ontario (Edge, MKX, Nautilus): 7,000
- Kansas City 1 (Transit): 700
- Chicago (Explorer, Aviator): 500
- Ohio Assembly (E-Series, F-Series Super Duty): 300
Subaru: 9,000 vehicles, Lafayette, Ind. (Impreza, Legacy, Outback, Ascent)
Stellantis: 6,000 vehicles, Brampton, Ontario (Charger, Challenger, 300, 300C)
Nissan: 5,900 vehicles, Aguascalientes, Mexico (Micra, March, Versa, Kicks)
Volkswagen: 2,800 vehicles, Puebla, Mexico (Tiguan, Taos)
In addition, the number of vehicles impacted in Asia outside of China soared to 258,000, up from 105,000 a week earlier.
The latest changes raise the number of vehicles not produced globally because of announced shutdowns and slowdowns to 1.38 million, up from 1.16 million a week earlier. AFS now projects that 2.39 million stand to be affected.
The breakdown
Source: AutoForecast Solutions Inc. autoforecastsolutions.com