FORD ADDING ELECTRIFIED F-150, MUSTANG, TRANSIT BY 2020 IN
MAJOR EV PUSH; EXPANDED U.S. PLANT TO ADD 700 JOBS TO MAKE EVS, AUTONOMOUS
CARS
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Ford confirms seven of 13 new global
electrified vehicles coming in the next five years, including F-150
Hybrid, Mustang Hybrid and Transit Custom plug-in hybrid
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Ford to launch fully electric SUV
with an estimated range of at least 300 miles and two new electrified
police vehicles
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The automaker is investing $700
million and adding 700 direct new jobs in Flat Rock (Michigan) Assembly
Plant to create a factory capable of producing high-tech electrified and
autonomous vehicles – plus the iconic Ford Mustang and Lincoln Continental
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Ford is piloting wireless technology
that makes recharging an electric vehicle as easy as pulling into a
parking spot; in addition, the company is testing EV prototypes this year
in Europe, New York and other large U.S. cities
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Ford is canceling plans for a new
$1.6 billion plant in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, and investing $700 million
in the Flat Rock, Michigan, plant’s expansion; Ford will build its
next-generation Focus at an existing plant in Hermosillo, Mexico, to
improve company profitability
FLAT ROCK, Mich., Jan. 3, 2017 –
Ford today detailed seven of the 13 new global electrified vehicles it
plans to introduce in the next five years, including hybrid versions of
the iconic F-150 pickup and Mustang in the U.S., a plug-in hybrid Transit
Custom van in Europe and a fully electric SUV with an expected range of at
least 300 miles for customers globally.
The automaker also announced plans to invest $700 million to expand its
Flat Rock Assembly Plant in Michigan into a factory that will build
high-tech autonomous and electric vehicles along with the Mustang and
Lincoln Continental. The expansion will create 700 direct new jobs.
The moves are part of a $4.5 billion investment in electrified vehicles by
2020, offering customers greater fuel efficiency, capability and power
across Ford’s global vehicle lineup. The plans are part of the company’s
expansion to be an auto and a mobility company, including leading in
electrified and autonomous vehicles and providing new mobility solutions.
“As more and more consumers around the world become interested in
electrified vehicles, Ford is committed to being a leader in providing
consumers with a broad range of electrified vehicles, services and
solutions that make people’s lives better,” said Mark Fields, Ford
president and CEO. “Our investments and expanding lineup reflect our view
that global offerings of electrified vehicles will exceed gasoline-powered
vehicles within the next 15 years.”
Ford is focusing its EV plan on its areas of strength – electrifying its
most popular, high-volume commercial vehicles, trucks, SUVs and
performance vehicles to make them even more capable, productive and fun to
drive.
The seven global electrified vehicles announced today include:
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An all-new fully electric small SUV,
coming by 2020, engineered to deliver an estimated range of at least 300
miles, to be built at the Flat Rock plant and sold in North America,
Europe and Asia
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A high-volume autonomous vehicle
designed for commercial ride hailing or ride sharing, starting in North
America. The hybrid vehicle will debut in 2021 and will be built at the
Flat Rock plant
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A hybrid version of the best-selling
F-150 pickup available by 2020 and sold in North America and the Middle
East. The F-150 Hybrid, built at Ford’s Dearborn Truck Plant, will offer
powerful towing and payload capacity and operate as a mobile generator
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A hybrid version of the iconic
Mustang that will deliver V8 power and even more low-end torque. The
Mustang Hybrid, built at the Flat Rock Plant, debuts in 2020 and will be
available in the North America to start
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A Transit Custom plug-in hybrid
available in 2019 in Europe engineered to help reduce operating costs in
even the most congested streets
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Two new, pursuit-rated hybrid police
vehicles. One of the two new hybrid police vehicles will be built in
Chicago, and both will be upfitted with their police gear at Ford’s
dedicated police vehicle modification center in Chicago
In addition, Ford announces that its
global utility lineup will be the company’s first hybrids powered by
EcoBoost® rather than naturally aspirated engines, furthering improving
performance and fuel economy.
The company also plans to be as aggressive in developing global
electrified vehicles services and solutions. These include EV fleet
management, route planning and telematics solutions.
Building the Future
To support the new era of vehicles, Ford is adding 700 direct new U.S.
jobs and investing $700 million during the next four years, creating the
new Manufacturing Innovation Center at its Flat Rock Assembly Plant.
Employees there will build the all-new small utility vehicle with extended
battery range as well as the fully autonomous vehicle for ride-hailing or
ride-sharing – along with the iconic Mustang and Lincoln Continental.
“I am thrilled that we have been able to secure additional UAW-Ford jobs
for American workers,” said Jimmy Settles, UAW vice president, National
Ford Department. “The men and women of Flat Rock Assembly have shown a
great commitment to manufacturing quality products, and we look forward to
their continued success with a new generation of high-tech vehicles.”
This incremental investment in Flat Rock Assembly Plant comes from $1.6
billion the company previously had planned to invest in a new plant in
Mexico.
Ford today announced it is cancelling plans for the new plant in San Luis
Potosi, Mexico. It also announced that, to improve company profitability
and ensure the financial as well as commercial success of this vehicle,
the next-generation Focus will be built at an existing plant in Hermosillo,
Mexico. This will make way for two new iconic products at Michigan
Assembly Plant in Wayne, Michigan, where Focus is manufactured today –
safeguarding approximately 3,500 U.S. jobs.
Unique ElectrificationTechnology
Building on two decades of experience, Ford is applying lessons learned to
deliver patented technology, software and services to appeal to truck
customers, SUV owners, performance enthusiasts, high-volume commercial
fleets and everyone in between.
“Ford’s global EV strategy is to build on our strengths,” said Raj Nair,
executive vice president, Product Development, and chief technical
officer. “While some others seem to be focused on marketing claims and
numbers, we’re focused on providing customers even more of what they love
about their Ford vehicles. This means more capability for trucks, more
productivity for commercial vehicles and more performance for sports cars
– plus improved fuel economy.”
This year, Ford begins testing its new generation of EV technology. In
Europe, Ford will put the Transit Custom plug-in hybrid on the road later
this year, along with a new set of mobility services, telematics and
connectivity solutions.
In addition, in New York and several major U.S. cities, Ford is testing a
fleet of 20 Transit Connect hybrid taxi and van prototypes in some of the
world’s most demanding traffic conditions.
These Transit Connects build on the success of the world’s first hybrid
taxi – the Ford Escape Hybrid – which also was the world’s first hybrid
SUV and the first North American-built hybrid. Many Escape Hybrid taxis
are still on the road, moving passengers for more than 350,000 miles each
and still using their original batteries.
Today, Ford is America’s top-selling plug-in hybrid brand and second in
overall U.S. electrified vehicle sales.
New Services
Applying approximately two decades of leadership in EVs and commercial
vehicles, Ford also is working on a suite of services to make EVs even
easier to live with.
“Innovative services can be as important to customers as the electrified
vehicles themselves,” said Hau Thai-Tang, group vice president of
Purchasing and Ford’s EV champion. “We are investing in solutions to help
private customers as well as commercial fleet owners seamlessly
incorporate these new vehicles and technologies into their lives.”
Ford already has a memorandum of understanding with several other
automakers in Europe to create an ultra-fast charging network projected to
be significantly faster than the most powerful charging system deployed
today. An initial target of about 400 sites in Europe is planned. By 2020,
consumers should have access to thousands of high-powered charging points.
Ford also is piloting wireless technology on company EVs in the U.S. and
Europe that make recharging as easy as pulling into a parking spot so
drivers never forget to recharge. Wireless recharging extends
electric-only range for short distance commuters, even during quick stops.
FordPass® also can help consumers reserve charging times.
Understanding customers
Ford has been extensively studying how past and current EV owners use
their vehicles. The company has sold more than 520,000 electrified
vehicles in North America since 2005 and 560,000 globally.
In studying 33,000 Ford EV owners that have made 58 million unique trips,
Ford has learned:
88 percent of customers’ habitual daily driving distance is 60 miles or
less. For plug-in hybrids, the average refueling distance is 680 miles,
making gas station trips rare
Customers want as much electric range as possible, but range anxiety drops
over time as they become more comfortable and familiar with the technology
80 percent of Ford EV customers charge once a day; 60 percent during
evenings
Ford EV customers collectively have plugged in their vehicles a total of
9.4 million nights
An overwhelming majority of Ford EV owners expect to replace their current
EV with a new one, additional Ford research shows. Specifically:
92 percent of battery electric car customers say they will purchase
another battery electric vehicle as their next purchase
87 percent of plug-in hybrid customers want another plug-in for their next
vehicle
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