Labour emerging as major post-pandemic headache for tire makers | European Rubber Journal

2022-05-20 22:29:00 By : Ms. Joanna Ho

Reports and feedback indicate manufacturers now “facing a labour shortage with no end in sight”

London – Tire companies are finding it increasingly difficult to fill job vacancies at their production facilities with knock-on impacts on operational costs and productivity, latest reports from manufacturers, suppliers and analysts suggest.

In its 2021 financial results reporting, Michelin said last year was in part “shaped” by labour shortages that impacted the manufacturing operations of both the group and its suppliers. 

Michelin’s speciality tires segment, for example, was “severely disrupted” by difficulties arising from labour shortages, preventing it from "fully meeting robust customer demand,“ the French group stated in a 14 Feb financial results release.

And, it suggested, while government financial support may have slowed a return-to-work, “in a more structural way, these hiring difficulties [might] arise from certain Covid-related social changes that have created a new relationship to work.”

“And while we’ve had absenteeism in our EMEA factories, we haven’t had the level of turnover and the training demands that we’ve had in the US," Wells added in comments about Goodyear 2021 results. 

In the longer term, skills shortages might “spur greater investment in automation in tire manufacturing and warehousing,” Smithers suggested in a study, titled The Impact of Supply Chain Disruption on Tire Manufacturing.  

These themes were echoed in an online article by Jordan Konst, global industry consultant, automotive & tire, who listed skills issues among the biggest current difficulties being experienced by tire makers. 

“If you’re like many tire producers I’ve met with recently, you’re also facing a labour shortage with no end in sight,” the Rockwell consultant commented. 

“Workers you’ve depended on for decades are leaving the workforce in record numbers. And despite higher wages and other incentives, replacements are difficult to find,” he explained.

These issues, believes Konst, will contribute to a momentum-swing “from automation in the traditional sense to autonomous operations, enabled by advancements in artificial intelligence and machine learning technology.”