Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ford high-tech factory to make electric F-150s

- KEITH NAUGHTON

Ford Motor Co., facing an onslaught of competitio­n for its new battery-powered F-150 pickup, unveiled the high-tech factory that will produce the electric truck using self-driving transport sleds and robots collaborat­ing with human workers.

The plant is going inside Ford’s 92-year-old Rouge complex in Dearborn, Mich., and will be the “most advanced facility we’ve got in the world,” manufactur­ing chief Gary Johnson told reporters in a briefing Wednesday. The autonomous sleds will transport truck bodies from one station to the next, while robots help assemble the vehicles. The factory is scheduled to be completed next summer and begin building prototype electric F150s.

Ford is spending $700 million to overhaul its Rouge complex as it wages a pitched battle to maintain decades of dominance in the pickup segment. It has already begun building a redesigned version of its gasoline-fueled F-150, the company’s biggest money-maker. Though it sold almost 900,000 F-Series trucks last year, Ford is playing catch-up with more recently revamped versions of its primary rivals: Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV’s Ram and General Motors Co.’s Chevrolet Silverado.

The second-largest U.S. automaker also is seeking to stake a substantia­l claim to the emerging market for electric trucks, which has seen a rash of new entrants, including Tesla Inc.’s Cybertruck, Rivian Automotive Inc.’s R1T and Nikola Corp.’s Badger.

Ford shares rose 3.7% in New York trading Thursday.

Ford said its electric truck, set to go on sale in 2022, will be the fastest and most powerful pickup it has ever produced. The automaker cast its competitor­s as “lifestyle trucks,” saying the electric F-150 will double as a mobile generator capable of powering a job site or the driver’s home.

Ford has invested more than a half-billion dollars in one of those new rivals: Rivian. The automaker is jointly developing an electric vehicle with the startup founded by R.J. Scaringe.

“We really like R.J. and what he’s doing because he’s standing up product, great product, commercial and retail,” Chief Operating Officer and future Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley told reporters after introducin­g the new F-150 Thursday. “But our relationsh­ip is much broader. Don’t think of it as a transactio­nal relationsh­ip for a vehicle. It’s a strategic investment.”

The automaker’s research found “very substantia­l demand” that “focused on the work customer,” Kumar Galhotra, Ford’s president of the Americas and internatio­nal markets, told reporters Wednesday. “It was enough for us to make this investment both in the product as well as the factory.”

The new 500,000-squarefoot Rouge Electric Vehicle center will create 300 new jobs and produce a gasoline-electric hybrid version of the F-150 that will go on sale sooner than the electric truck.

The two electrifie­d models represent the future of the FSeries, according to the automaker.

“It sets the Rouge up with a long-term vision with new technology and battery-electric products with our most important vehicle,” Johnson said.

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