Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ford preps for EV batteries

Company plans $185M lab, seeks lead on electric cars

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DETROIT — Saying that it wants to control the key technology for electric vehicles, Ford plans to open a battery developmen­t center near Detroit by the end of next year.

The company said the 200,000-square-foot facility will have equipment to design, test and even do small-scale manufactur­ing of battery cells and packs. The $185 million lab also will develop electronic controls and other items as Ford moves more of the process in-house.

Eventually, the company wants to do large-scale manufactur­ing of its own batteries globally, a task now performed by supply companies. The move comes as the global auto industry races to control supplies including precious metals needed to make batteries and individual cells that form big battery packs to run as many as 300 new electric models coming out in the next two years.

Like many global automakers who have been stung by computer chip and other supply chain shortages, Ford wants to make sure it has enough batteries for what it says is an accelerati­ng transition away from internal combustion engines.

The company’s chief product and operations officer Hau ThaiTang said electric vehicles are moving from early adopters to an early majority as new models come out and Ford wants to lead the transition.

“We now see that the market is going to develop very quickly and we will have sufficient scale to justify having greater levels of integratio­n,” he said.

Under new CEO Jim Farley, the plan is a reversal from Ford’s previous path of buying technology and batteries from supply companies. However, the company said it still could partner with suppliers, universiti­es and startups on the technology.

Ford wouldn’t say where in Southeast Michigan it plans to build the battery center, named “Ford Ion Park,” nor would it reveal potential battery factory locations. The center would employ about 150 workers to start and many of them already are working at existing Ford sites.

Ford said it has discussed the transition to battery power with the Biden administra­tion, which has pegged much of its climate change policy to getting more electric vehicles on the roads.

The announceme­nt comes after Ford got caught up in a trade secrets fight between LG Entergy and the company’s main battery supplier, SK Innovation. The U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission decided in February that SK stole 22 trade secrets from LG Energy and it should be barred from importing, making or selling batteries in the United States for 10 years.

The decision gave SK four years to make batteries for Ford and it could have left the company scrambling for supplies. SK has the contract to make batteries for an electric version of Ford’s F-150 pickup, the nation’s top-selling vehicle. The dispute was settled last month with SK agreeing to pay $1.8 billion and an undisclose­d royalty.

Automakers have been moving toward building their own batteries and they’ve been securing their own supplies of raw materials such as lithium, copper, nickel and other precious metals directly from producers. Guidehouse Insights Principal Analyst Sam Abuelsamid said the global semiconduc­tor shortage and the SK Innovation trade dispute likely made Ford pull ahead its plans much faster.

Many automakers including Volkswagen, General Motors and Stellantis are pulling battery developmen­t and manufactur­ing in-house or into joint ventures formed with parts supply companies, he said.

“Engines and transmissi­ons have been considered a core competency of automakers since 1886, but as those go away, they are seeing the need to make batteries and motors the replacemen­t,” Abuelsamid said. “No one wants to get locked out of supplies, and as volumes scale, the cost of paying a markup to suppliers is going to grow.”

 ?? (AP/Photo Courtesy of Ford) ?? This photo provided by Ford shows Dane Hardware, Ford Motor Co. design and release engineer, and Mary Fredrick, Ford Motor Co. battery validation engineer, measuring the voltage of a battery using a digital multi-meter at Ford’s Battery Benchmarki­ng and Test Laboratory in Allen Park, Mich., in early April.
(AP/Photo Courtesy of Ford) This photo provided by Ford shows Dane Hardware, Ford Motor Co. design and release engineer, and Mary Fredrick, Ford Motor Co. battery validation engineer, measuring the voltage of a battery using a digital multi-meter at Ford’s Battery Benchmarki­ng and Test Laboratory in Allen Park, Mich., in early April.

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