French carmakers lose hope for rebound in sales as global chip shortage & surge in Covid-19 cases drag market down

1 Aug, 2021 13:31

Hopes for a strong rebound by the French car market have been shattered amid the global deficit of semiconductor chips, and increasing coronavirus infections, the French association of carmakers CCFA-PFA said on Sunday.

The lobbying body had expected car sales to increase by up to 10%, but those projections could be toned down, according to a spokesperson for CCFA.

“We think it might be difficult to achieve 1.8 million of sales this year,” the spokesperson said, as quoted by Reuters.

In 2020, registrations of new French passenger cars dropped to 1.65 million from some 2.21 million recorded in the previous year. The drastic decline is attributed to the pandemic, which brought car factories to a halt.

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In July alone, new car registrations dipped by nearly 35% compared to the same period a year ago, the data issued by data issued by CCFA-PFA reveals. Registrations of new passenger vehicles reportedly amounted to 115,713.

The French car market is up by some 16% over the first seven months of the year compared with the same period in pandemic-struck 2020, according to the association.

The global semiconductor chip shortage, along with uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus pandemic, are having significant negative impacts, affecting most automakers, including French carmaker Renault and its Franco-Italian arch-rival Stellantis.

Semiconductor chips are crucial parts of new automobiles, which are widely used for infotainment systems, as well as for basic mechanisms, such as power steering and brakes. The average vehicle may contain hundreds such chips.

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