The automotive industry is under pressure. From escalating compliance mandates to raw material constraints and persistent logistics delays, supply chains are being reengineered in real time. Resilinc’s new Automotive Supply Chain Challenges 2025 report reveals how automakers are adapting to a risk landscape defined by trade uncertainty, rare earth restrictions, and regulatory enforcement.
Navigating 2025’s top automotive supply chain risks
With mounting exposure to China-dependent materials and increased customs scrutiny, many OEMs and Tier-1 suppliers are turning to next-gen tools like AI and blockchain to rebuild resilience from the ground up.
In this blog, we’ll explore the top risk trends facing the industry, along with resilience strategies you can implement to mitigate disruptions and stay compliant in a fast-changing global environment.
1. Prepare for stricter compliance enforcement In 2025, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has stepped up enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA), and the automotive industry is squarely in the crosshairs. According to Resilinc data, over 5,200 shipments were detained in the first half of 2025 alone, a 1,580% increase over the previous year. Most were tied to electronics and wire harnesses containing banned Chinese subcomponents.
CBP now requires traceability beyond Tier-1, and regulators are no longer accepting insufficient documentation. To stay compliant, automakers are adopting blockchain audits, supplier mapping, and AI-based screening tools to flag hidden risk before shipments reach customs.
2. Reduce material dependencies to strengthen resilience Rare earths, lithium, and graphite remain major supply risks, especially for electric vehicle (EV) production. Over 80% of rare earths and more than half of lithium refining globally are controlled by China. As a result, automakers are securing alternate supply, investing in recycling, and designing products to reduce dependence on constrained inputs like cobalt and palladium.
For example, GM recently signed a multibillion-dollar deal for synthetic graphite from Norway and boosted lithium investments in Nevada. These strategies are helping OEMs maintain compliance under the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and avoid production delays.
3. Plan around logistics bottlenecks and global trade shifts Auto supply chains continue to suffer from outbound shipping delays, driver shortages, and port congestion. Meanwhile, recent tariff pauses between the U.S. and China offer only temporary relief. New policies like the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and USMCA sourcing rules are also accelerating shifts toward regional production.
To adapt, manufacturers are leaning into nearshoring strategies—with Mexico and Morocco emerging as automotive hubs. Mexico, for instance, is on track to become the world’s fifth-largest vehicle producer by year-end.
4. Leverage AI to monitor, predict, and respond to risk in real-time AI-driven supply chain monitoring is no longer a nice-to-have—it’s a competitive necessity. Resilinc’s EventWatchAI system scans over 150 million data sources in real time to deliver early warnings on everything from geopolitical instability to weather-driven disruptions.
When paired with Agentic AI, companies can automate mitigation workflows, simulate tariff impacts, and receive immediate risk recommendations, dramatically reducing time-to-action.
The road ahead: Strategic resilience in the new era
The second half of 2025 will continue to test the automotive sector. From EU battery passport regulations to renewed export controls on Chinese materials, supply chains must be smarter, faster, and more transparent.
As our report outlines, now is the time to:
- Reassess sub-tier supplier risk exposure
- Digitize customs documentation to avoid shipment delays
- Join industry networks like Auto-ISAC to share intelligence
- Adopt AI and blockchain tools to future-proof your compliance strategy
Download the full Automotive Supply Chain Challenges 2025 Special Report
Let’s build a more resilient, self-healing supply chain—before the next disruption hits.