"For much of last year, established automakers like General
Motors and Ford Motor operated in a different reality from Tesla, the electric
car company.
G.M. and Ford closed one factory after another — sometimes
for months on end — because of a shortage of computer chips, leaving dealer
lots bare and sending car prices zooming. Yet Tesla racked up record sales
quarter after quarter and ended the year having sold nearly twice as many
vehicles as it did in 2020 unhindered by an industrywide crisis.
Tesla’s ability to conjure up critical components has a
greater significance than one year’s car sales. It suggests that the company,
and possibly other young electric car businesses, could threaten the dominance
of giants like Volkswagen and G.M. sooner and more forcefully than most
industry executives and policymakers realize. That would help the effort to
reduce the emissions that are causing climate change by displacing more
gasoline-powered cars sooner. But it could hurt the millions of workers,
thousands of suppliers and numerous local and national governments that rely on
traditional auto production for jobs, business and tax revenue.
Tesla and its enigmatic chief executive, Elon Musk, have
said little about how the carmaker ran circles around the rest of the auto
industry. Now it’s becoming clear that the company simply had a superior
command of technology and its own supply chain. Tesla appeared to better
forecast demand than businesses that produce many more cars than it does. Other
automakers were surprised by how quickly the car market recovered from a steep
drop early in the pandemic and had simply not ordered enough chips and parts
fast enough.
When Tesla couldn’t get the chips it had counted on, it took
the ones that were available and rewrote the software that operated them to
suit its needs. Larger auto companies couldn’t do that because they relied on
outside suppliers for much of their software and computing expertise. In many
cases, automakers also relied on these suppliers to deal with chip
manufacturers. When the crisis hit, the automakers lacked bargaining clout.
Just a few years ago, analysts saw Mr. Musk’s insistence on
having Tesla do more things on its own as one of the main reasons the company
was struggling to increase production. Now, his strategy appears to have been
vindicated.
Cars are becoming increasingly digital, defined by their
software as much as their engines and transmissions. It’s a reality that some
old-line car companies increasingly acknowledge. Many, including Ford and
Mercedes-Benz, have said in recent months that they are hiring engineers and
programmers to design their own chips and write their own software.
“Tesla, born in Silicon Valley, never outsourced their
software — they write their own code,” said Morris Cohen, a professor emeritus
at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in
manufacturing and logistics. “They rewrote the software so they could replace
chips in short supply with chips not in short supply. The other carmakers were
not able to do that.”
“Tesla controlled its destiny,” Professor Cohen added.
Tesla sold 936,000 cars globally in 2021, an 87 percent
increase for the year. Ford, G.M. and Stellantis, the company formed from the
merger of Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot, all sold fewer cars in 2021 than they did
in 2020.
Measured by vehicles delivered globally, Tesla vaulted past
Volvo and Subaru in 2021, and some analysts predicted that it could sell two
million cars this year, as factories in Berlin and Austin, Texas, come online
and a plant in Shanghai ramps up production. That would put Tesla in the same
league as BMW and Mercedes — something few in the industry thought possible
just a couple of years ago.
G.M. and Ford, of course, sell many more cars and trucks.
Both companies said last week that they sold around two million vehicles last
year just in the United States.
Tesla, which rarely answers questions from reporters, did
not respond to a request for comment for this article. It has said little
publicly about how it managed to soar in a down market.
“We have used alternative parts and programmed software to
mitigate the challenges caused by these shortages,” the company said in its
third-quarter earnings report.
The performance is a stark turnaround from 2018, when
Tesla’s production and supply problems made it an industry laughingstock. Many
of the manufacturing snafus stemmed from Mr. Musk’s insistence that the company
make many parts itself.
Other car companies have realized that they need to do some
of what Mr. Musk and Tesla have been doing all along and are in the process of
taking control of their onboard computer systems.
Mercedes, for example, plans to use fewer specialized chips
in coming models and more standardized semiconductors, and to write its own
software, said Markus Schäfer, a member of the German carmaker’s management
board who oversees procurement.
In the future, Mercedes will “make sure we have customized,
standardized chips in the car,” Mr. Schäfer said in an interview on Wednesday.
“Not one thousand different chips.”
Mercedes will also design its own vehicle hardware, he said.
Without mentioning Tesla, Mr. Schäfer added, “Probably some others were earlier
going down this road.”
Doing more on its own also helps explain why Tesla avoided
shortages of batteries, which have limited companies like Ford and G.M. from
selling lots of electric cars. In 2014, when most carmakers were still debating
whether electric vehicles would ever amount to anything, Tesla broke ground on
what it called a gigafactory outside Reno, Nev., to produce batteries with its
partner, Panasonic. Now, that factory helps ensure a reliable supply.
“It was a big risk,” said Ryan Melsert, a former Tesla
executive who was involved in construction of the Nevada plant. “But because
they have made decisions early on to bring things in house, they have much more
control over their own fate.”
As Professor Cohen of Wharton pointed out, Tesla’s approach
is in many ways a throwback to the early days of the automobile, when Ford
owned its own steel plants and rubber plantations. In recent decades, the
conventional auto wisdom had it that manufacturers should concentrate on design
and final assembly and farm out the rest to suppliers. That strategy helped
reduce how much money big players tied up in factories, but left them
vulnerable to supply chain turmoil.
It also helps that Tesla is a much smaller company than
Volkswagen and Toyota, which in a good year produce more than 10 million
vehicles each. “It’s just a smaller supply chain to begin with,” said Mr.
Melsert, who is now chief executive of American Battery Technology Company, a
recycling and mining firm.
The Tesla lineup is also more modest and easier to supply.
The Model 3 sedan and Model Y sport utility vehicle accounted for almost all of
the company’s sales in 2021. Tesla also offers fewer options than many of the
traditional carmakers, which simplifies manufacturing.
“It’s a more streamlined approach,” said Phil Amsrud, a
senior principal analyst who specializes in automotive semiconductors at IHS
Markit, a research firm. “They are not trying to manage all these different
configurations.”
Tesla software, which can be updated remotely, is considered
the most sophisticated in the auto business. Even so, the company’s cars likely
use fewer chips, analysts said, because the company controls functions like
battery cooling and autonomous driving from a smaller number of centralized,
onboard computers.
“Tesla has fewer boxes,” Mr. Amsrud said. “The fewer the
components you need right now, the better.”
Of course, Tesla could still run into problems as it tries
to replicate the growth it achieved in 2021 — it is aiming to increase sales
about 50 percent a year for the next several years. The company acknowledged in
its third-quarter report that its creative maneuvering around supply chain
chaos might not work so well as it increased production and needed more chips
and other parts.
The electric vehicle market is also becoming much more
competitive as the traditional carmakers belatedly respond with models that
people want to buy rather than the small electric vehicles typically made to
appease regulators. Ford said this past week that it would nearly double
production of the Lightning, an electric version of its popular F-150 pickup
truck, because of strong demand. Tesla’s pickup truck won’t go on sale for at
least another year.
The outlook for the traditional carmakers is likely to
improve this year as shortages of semiconductors and other components ease, and
as manufacturers get better at coping.
Tesla vehicles still suffer from quality problems. The
company told regulators in December that it planned to recall more than 475,000
cars for two separate defects. One could cause the rearview camera to fail, and
the other could cause the front hood to open unexpectedly. And federal
regulators are investigating the safety of Tesla’s Autopilot system, which can
accelerate, brake and steer a car on its own.
“Tesla will continue to grow,” said Stephen Beck, managing
partner at cg42, a management consulting firm in New York. “But they are facing
more competition than they ever have, and the competition is getting stronger.”
The carmaker’s fundamental advantage, which allowed it to
sail through the chip crisis, will remain, however. Tesla builds nothing but
electric vehicles and is unencumbered by habits and procedures that have been
rendered obsolete by new technology. “Tesla started from a clean sheet of
paper,” Mr. Amsrud said."
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