Automotive industry


The automotive industry comprises a wide range of companies and organizations involved in the design, development, manufacturing, marketing, selling, repairing, and modification of motor vehicles. It is one of the world's largest industries by revenue with global automotive market at ~$2.75 trillion in 2025.
The word automotive comes from the Greek autos, and Latin motivus, referring to any form of self-powered vehicle. This term, as proposed by Elmer Sperry, first came into use to describe automobiles in 1898.

History

The automotive industry began in the 1860s with hundreds of manufacturers pioneering the horseless carriage. Early car manufacturing involved manual assembly by a human worker. The process evolved from engineers working on a stationary car to a conveyor belt system where the car passed through multiple stations of more specialized engineers. In the 1960s, robotic equipment was introduced, and most cars are now mainly assembled by automated machinery.
For many decades, the United States led the world in total automobile production, with the U.S. Big Three General Motors, Ford Motor Company, and Chrysler being the world's three largest auto manufacturers for a time, and G.M. and Ford remaining the two largest until the mid-2000s. In 1929, before the Great Depression, the world had 32,028,500 automobiles in use, of which the U.S. automobile enterprises produced more than 90%. At that time, the U.S. had one car per 4.87 persons. After 1945, the U.S. produced around three-quarters of the world's auto production. In 1980, the U.S. was overtaken by Japan and then became a world leader again in 1994. Japan narrowly passed the U.S. in production during 2006 and 2007, and in 2008 also China, which in 2009 took the top spot with 13.8 million units, although the U.S. surpassed Japan in 2011, to become the second-largest automobile industry. In 2024, China produced more than 31 million vehicles in a year, after breaking 30 million in 2023, reaching 29 million for the first time in 2017 and 28 million the year before. In 2024, China produced the most passenger cars in the world, with Japan, India, Germany, and South Korea trailing. This was achieved by Chinese car companies signing joint ventures with foreign manufacturers. From 1970 to 1998 to 2012, the number of automobile models in the U.S. has grown exponentially.

Safety

Safety is a state that implies being protected from any risk, danger, damage, or cause of injury. In the automotive industry, safety means that users, operators, or manufacturers do not face any risk or danger coming from the motor vehicle or its spare parts. Safety for the automobiles themselves implies that there is no risk of damage.
Safety in the automotive industry is particularly important and therefore highly regulated. Automobiles and other motor vehicles have to comply with a certain number of regulations, whether local or international, in order to be accepted on the market. The standard ISO 26262, is considered one of the best practice frameworks for achieving automotive functional safety.
In case of safety issues, danger, product defect, or faulty procedure during the manufacturing of the motor vehicle, the maker can request to return either a batch or the entire production run. This procedure is called product recall. Product recalls happen in every industry and can be production-related or stem from raw materials.
Product and operation tests and inspections at different stages of the value chain are made to avoid these product recalls by ensuring end-user security and safety and compliance with the automotive industry requirements. However, the automotive industry is still particularly concerned about product recalls, which cause considerable financial consequences.

Economy

In 2007, there were about 806 million cars and light trucks on the road, consuming over of gasoline and diesel fuel yearly. The automobile is a primary mode of transportation for many developed economies. The Detroit branch of Boston Consulting Group predicted that, by 2014, one-third of world demand would be in the four BRIC markets. Meanwhile, in developed countries, the automotive industry has slowed. It is also expected that this trend will continue, especially as the younger generations of people no longer want to own a car, and prefer other modes of transport. Other potentially powerful automotive markets are Iran and Indonesia.
Emerging automobile markets already buy more cars than established markets.
According to a J.D. Power study, emerging markets accounted for 51 percent of the global light-vehicle sales in 2010. The study, performed in 2010 expected this trend to accelerate. However, more recent reports confirmed the opposite; namely that the automotive industry was slowing down even in BRIC countries. In the United States, vehicle sales peaked in 2000, at 17.8 million units.
In July 2021, the European Commission released its "Fit for 55" legislation package, which contains important guidelines for the future of the automotive industry; all new cars on the European market must be zero-emission vehicles from 2035.
The governments of 24 developed countries and a group of major car manufacturers including GM, Ford, Volvo, BYD Auto, Jaguar Land Rover and Mercedes-Benz committed to "work towards all sales of new cars and vans being zero emission globally by 2040, and by no later than 2035 in leading markets". Major car manufacturing nations like the United States, Germany, China, Japan and South Korea, as well as Volkswagen, Toyota, Peugeot, Honda, Nissan and Hyundai, did not pledge.

Environmental impacts

The global automotive industry is a major consumer of water. Some estimates surpass of water per car manufactured, depending on whether tyre production is included. Production processes that use a significant volume of water include surface treatment, painting, coating, washing, cooling, air-conditioning, and boilers, not counting component manufacturing. Paintshop operations consume especially large amounts of water because equipment running on water-based products must also be cleaned with water.
In 2022, Tesla's Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg ran into legal challenges due to droughts and falling groundwater levels in the region. Brandenburg's Economy Minister Joerg Steinbach said that while water supply was sufficient during the first stage, more would be needed once Tesla expands the site. The factory would nearly double the water consumption in the Gruenheide area, with 1.4 million cubic meters being contracted from local authorities per year — enough for a city of around 40,000 people. Steinbach said that the authorities would like to drill for more water there and outsource any additional supply if necessary.

World motor vehicle production

By year

YearProductionChange
199754,434,000
199852,987,000 2.7%
199956,258,892 6.2%
200058,374,162 3.8%
200156,304,925 3.5%
200258,994,318 4.8%
200360,663,225 2.8%
200464,496,220 6.3%
200566,482,439 3.1%
200669,222,975 4.1%
200773,266,061 5.8%
200870,520,493 3.7%
200961,791,868 12.4%
201077,857,705 26.0%
201179,989,155 3.1%
201284,141,209 5.3%
201387,300,115 3.7%
201489,747,430 2.6%
201590,086,346 0.4%
201694,976,569 4.5%
201797,302,534 2.36%
201895,634,593 1.71%
201991,786,861 5.2%
202077,621,582 16%
202180,145,988 3.25%
202285,016,728 6.08%

By country

The OICA counts over 50 countries that assemble, manufacture, or disseminate automobiles. Of those, only 15 countries currently possess the capability to design original production automobiles from the ground up, and 17 countries have at least one million produced vehicles a year.


CountryProduced vehicles 2023
China
30,160,966
USA10,611,555
Japan8,997,440
India5,851,507
Republic of Korea4,243,597
Germany4,109,371
Mexico4,002,047
Spain2,451,221
Brazil2,324,838
Thailand1,841,663
Canada1,553,026
France1,505,076
Turkey1,468,393
Czechia1,404,501
Indonesia1,395,717
Slovakia1,080,000
U.K.1,025,474

By manufacturer

Top 10 (2016–2020)

These were the ten largest manufacturers by production volume as of 2017, of which the eight largest were in the top 8 positions since Fiat's 2013 acquisition of the Chrysler Corporation and the five largest in the top 5 positions since 2007, according to OICA, which, however, stopped publishing statistics of motor vehicle production by manufacturer after 2017. All ten remained as the ten largest automakers by sales until the merger between Fiat-Chrysler and the PSA Group in early 2021; only Renault was degraded to 11th place, in 2022, when being surpassed by both BMW and Chang'an.
RankGroupCountryProduced
vehicles
Sold vehicles
Sold vehicles
1ToyotaJapan10,466,05110,521,13410,741,556
2Volkswagen GroupGermany10,382,33410,831,23210,975,352
3General Motors
United States9,027,658
8,787,2337,724,163
4HyundaiSouth Korea7,218,3917,437,2097,189,893
5FordUnited States6,386,8185,734,2175,385,972
6NissanJapan5,769,2775,653,7435,176,211
7HondaJapan5,235,8425,265,8925,323,319
8Fiat-Chrysler
Italy /
United States
4,600,8474,841,3664,612,673
9RenaultFrance4,153,5893,883,9873,749,815
10PSA Group
France3,649,7424,126,3493,479,152