Supply chain problems further hobbled the EU car industry in April, data showed on Tuesday, with sales falling by a fifth from the same period last year.

A lack of computer chips has frustrated carmakers for over a year, with certain parts imported from Ukraine also now posing problems for manufacturers.

New passenger car registrations in the European Union “saw a significant drop” of 20.6 per cent in April “as supply chain issues continued to weigh heavily on car production,” the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA) said.

A total of 684,506 units were sold during the month in EU countries.

“With the exception of the pandemic year in 2020, this was the weakest April result in terms of volumes sold since records began,” the ACEA said.

With the exception of the pandemic year in 2020, this was the weakest April result in terms of volumes sold since records began- European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA)

All the major markets registered considerable drops, with sales in Italy down by a third, and both France and Germany off just more than a fifth. Spain was down by 12.1 per cent.

Over the first four months of the year, sales were down 14.4 per cent from 2021.

All European carmakers saw huge drops in sales in the first four months of the year, with market leader Volkswagen registering a 18 per cent fall.

Stellantis, merged from France’s Peugeot-Citroen and Fiat-Chrysler, suffered a 26 per cent drop in sales.

South Korea’s Hyundai Group, which includes the Hyundai and Kia brands, overtook France’s Renault for the number three spot in the EU in April by posting a 10.8 per cent jump in sales for the month.

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