The Columbus Dispatch

Ford’s multibilli­on-dollar stake

Company goes all-in on electric vehicles

- Phoebe Wall Howard

Ford Motor Co. on Monday night announced a historic investment in its future that will pump more than $11 billion into manufactur­ing a strong, dependable supply of essential parts for electric vehicles, creating nearly 11,000 jobs along the way.

This commitment — the single biggest investment in the history of the 118year-old automaker — will pay for a new assembly plant to build all-electric Fseries trucks and three battery plants. It establishe­s Ford as a contender in a transporta­tion battle that’s evolving in real time as automakers pivot from the internal combustion engine to batteryope­rated vehicles.

Ford had already announced an investment over the past two years of $950 million in the Rouge Complex in Dearborn, Mich., to build the all-electric 2022 F-150 Lightning.

Bringing the battery supply chain to the U.S. insulates Ford from being held hostage by battery shortages the way the industry has been kneecapped by the global semiconduc­tor chip shortage.

Two battery plants will be built in Glendale, Ken. A battery plant and the truck assembly plant will be built in Stanton, Tenn. It all pencils out to 5,000 jobs in Kentucky and 5,800 jobs in Tennessee.

This also establishe­s a clear path to zero-emission vehicles for Ford in North America.

Eyes on China

The investment includes $7 billion from Ford and about $4.4 billion from its joint venture with battery partner SK Innovation of South Korea, Ford said.

Where batteries are made, and where they’re shipped, will be key to automakers’ strength in coming years. China is positioned to be a superpower. Companies in the U.S. want a secure, local supply chain. General Motors has also taken steps in this direction, as have other competitor­s in the industry.

“This is a really important strategic bet to in-source these key components. It won’t be the last,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said during an interview Monday.

Farley has been making a comefrom-behind push on electrification since stepping into the top job at the company on Oct. 1.

Sold out already

Now he feels the company is positioned to truly compete in the all-electric arena.

“Are we ahead or behind? This announceme­nt puts us ahead. We already have sold out of our first generation of electric vehicles and we’re dealing with that capacity issue now,” Farley told the Free Press.

These new plants will produce perhaps twice as much per year as all the batteries made in the U.S. for automotive use at 129 gigawatts, Farley said.

“It’s a million units of batteries — annual,” he said. “It’s a million vehicles’ worth of batteries we’re announcing this week.”

With projects in Tennessee and Kentucky, combined with existing SK Innovation supplies made at a plant in Georgia, Ford now will be able to obtain the 140 gigawatts of battery capacity it has talked about having in five years, Farley said. “So, it’s happening at Ford. Our vehicles are sold out. And three to four years from now, with all this capacity, we’ll have more than a million units of batteries on our hands . ... This puts us on the map as a leader.”

These are not all the batteries that Ford will need for all electric vehicles in North America, but it’s a start, he said.

The company released this punch list:

h Ford is planning to build a 3,600acre mega campus in west Tennessee called Blue Oval City, designed to be the largest, most efficient factory in Ford history. It will include an assembly plant, battery production and supplier park. Inside the plant, “zero-waste-tolandfill” processes will capture materials and production scrap at an on site materials collection center to sort and route materials for recycling or processing either at the plant or off site.

h The assembly plant at Blue Oval City is designed to achieve a vision of carbon neutrality and meet the company’s air emission goals to have a regenerati­ve impact on the local environmen­t through “biomimicry in design of the plant facility.”

h In central Kentucky, Ford will build Blueovalsk Battery Park, consisting of twin battery plants that will power a new lineup of Ford and Lincoln vehicles coming to market later this decade. Production of advanced lithium-ion batteries will begin in 2025.

Ford will begin groundbrea­king later this year, Lisa Drake, Ford chief operating officer for North America, said in an interview with the Detroit Free Press.

Production is targeted to begin in 2025 at both sites in Tennessee and one site in Kentucky, with the second battery cell facility in Kentucky launching in 2026.

Recycling will be part of the whole operation too, she said.

“This will be the initial capacity that we install as we march towards our 40% EV penetratio­n in 2030,” Drake said.

The 3,600-acre site in west Tennessee is three times the size of the Rouge, she noted.

And there’s room to expand. “One battery cell plant consumes the energy five times that of Kentucky Truck” in Louisville, she said. “Requiremen­ts to build these types of properties are pretty substantia­l.”

They couldn’t be near earthquake or hurricane zones. They needed to be near highways and railways. Being close to aquifers creates potential to heat and cool portions of the operation efficiently, Drake said.

In addition, officials in Tennessee have set up a fund to pay for vocational training and develop curricula that teach the skills needed in the workforce, she said.

Tennessee officials said Ford’s return to the state is special because of its history. Ford opened a Model T assembly plant in Memphis, relocated to a new facility in South Memphis in 1924, and then relocated to Ohio in 1958.

With two Ford plants in Louisville, Kentucky’s Gov. Andy Beshear knows Ford well and worked to close this deal. He told the Free Press on Monday that the project involves a $250 million forgivable loan, which requires the automaker to meet its projection­s for investment and jobs.

“This is a variation of our normal incentive package,” Beshear said. “They’ll be able to draw on this loan over a period of about 20 years. It’ll include conveyance of the land, that is the mega site. It’s 1,500 acres off I-65, just about 40 minutes south of Louisville. And the last piece is about $36 million in training.”

Ford is also investing $90 million in Texas alone and $525 million nationally over the next five years on auto technician training as vehicle technology continues to improve.

While the new truck assembly plant will be a Ford facility, the three battery plants will be joint ventures with SK Innovation and subject to organizing by the UAW. Employees will have the ability to choose whether to unionize and Ford officials said they support their right to that choice.

Tesla on the horizon

Ford has been watching its U.S. competitor Tesla carefully, acknowledg­ing its leadership in the all-electric manufactur­ing space — and realizing Ford must do all it can to step up its game now.

“There is a very healthy sense of urgency in the company. The tension and the sense of urgency is from a competitiv­e environmen­t. It’s kind of undeniable,” Farley told the Free Press. “Tesla made a billion dollars, a billion dollars in the second quarter . ... They were very profitable in the vehicle business. And, as well, the battery-electric business in Europe is like 12% of the market. It’s going really fast.”

 ?? ERIC SEALS/TNS ?? Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer looks on as Penny Cauzillo talks to her about the payload tester she operates on the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning inside the plant where it will be built, the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center at the Ford Rouge Plant in Dearborn, Mich.
ERIC SEALS/TNS Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer looks on as Penny Cauzillo talks to her about the payload tester she operates on the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning inside the plant where it will be built, the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center at the Ford Rouge Plant in Dearborn, Mich.

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