Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ford electric-vehicles plant in Michigan to rev up work

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

Ford Motor Co. said Wednesday that it plans to spend about $900 million and hire about 900 workers to build electric and selfdrivin­g vehicles in Michigan, while moving production of a small commercial van to Mexico from Europe.

The moves, announced the same day President Donald Trump visited an Ohio tank plant, follows the president’s sharp criticism of General Motors Co. for idling a car factory in Lordstown, Ohio. Ford is reiteratin­g some previous financial and employment commitment­s while changing gears

for the third time on building electric autos at an underutili­zed factory south of Detroit.

Roughly a year and a half after shifting production of a future electric SUV to Mexico from Flat Rock, Mich., Ford says it now plans to build other battery-powered models there and add a second shift of workers by 2023, at a cost of $850 million. The automaker also is spending $50 million to establish a facility near Detroit where workers will add self-driving software to autonomous vehicles that will be built elsewhere. The Flat Rock factory will continue to produce the Mustang sports car and Lincoln Continenta­l sedan.

“When we stepped back and looked at our plans for the future with batteryele­ctric vehicles and electrific­ation in general and the commitment to $11 billion in investment, it was very clear to us over the last year or so that we were going to need a second plant,” Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of global operations, said in an interview. “It became pretty clear to us that Flat Rock was the right plant to have that capacity. It has a lot of experience building multiple different things.”

Chief Executive Officer Jim Hackett is leading an $11 billion overhaul of Ford, which saw net income fall

by more than half last year. The restructur­ing will involve cutting thousands of salaried jobs and closing factories in unprofitab­le overseas operations.

Ford shares fell as much as 2.5 percent Wednesday and closed down 2.1 percent at $8.52. The stock is up about 12 percent this year.

As sales of traditiona­l sedans have dwindled, Ford is preparing for a future when electric vehicles and selfdrivin­g cars transform transporta­tion. The Flat Rock factory has become a symbol of that change: Ford is cutting a shift of workers because of slow sales of the Continenta­l and Mustang, but will now create new jobs to build battery-powered vehicles. The company plans to transfer 650 workers from Flat Rock to other factories in April.

The United Auto Workers union, which is entering contract negotiatio­ns with more than 150,000 workers at Ford, GM and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV, praised the new investment.

“As we transition to new technology and future products, Flat Rock through this investment, is well positioned to be a world leader for decades to come in auto industry technology and production,” UAW Vice President Rory Gamble said in a statement.

Ford said it expects more electric vehicle sales in the coming years largely because

millennial­s, the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population, are more open to buying them. The company also sees higher gasoline prices and stronger emissions regulation­s in the future as well as more electric vehicle charging stations.

Ford is shifting production of its Transit Connect compact commercial van from Spain to a factory in Hermosillo, Mexico, that’s been producing the Fusion sedan. Hinrichs said he doesn’t expect the move to have any impact on a U.S. Customs case in which Ford has been accused of “tariff engineerin­g.”

Hinrichs said Ford had informed U.S. and Michigan government officials about the investment­s, but he declined to directly address Trump’s recent criticisms of GM.

“We’re just proud of our presence here in the U.S.,” Hinrichs said. He said the investment is part of the company’s plans to run its business more efficientl­y. The timing of the announceme­nt was because of requiremen­ts that parts suppliers be notified of manufactur­ing plans, Hinrichs said.

“We’ve been running our business this way for 10-plus years,” he said, adding that Ford is aware that auto manufactur­ing gets a lot of attention these days, and said he is proud that Ford employs more people represente­d by the UAW postings than any other manufactur­er. A union spokesman confirmed that statement.

Ford has wavered with its plans for the Flat Rock plant several times over the course of just a few years. As Trump was taking office in January 2017, then-CEO Mark Fields announced that the factory would build both self-driving cars and the electric SUV.

Fields was ousted four months later. In December 2017, his successor Hackett said the electric SUV would instead be built in Mexico, citing the need for more capacity in Flat Rock to build autonomous vehicles. The announceme­nt Wednesday suggests that Ford might not need as much capacity for self-driving cars, since it no longer plans to produce them in Flat Rock as it makes way for electric vehicles at the factory.

Hinrichs denied that Ford is dialing back its autonomous plans.

“Nothing has changed with our volume plans or our commitment to the technology launching in 2021,” Hinrichs said. “But also, in the name of fitness, we were evaluating all of our capital expenditur­es, so it became clear to us that we could do a less capital-intensive way of manufactur­ing for the first few years of AVs.”

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