The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Ford: EVs to be 40% of global sales by 2030

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT >> Ford expects 40% of its global sales to be battery-electric vehicles by 2030 as it adds billions to what it’s spending to develop them.

The automaker says in a presentati­on for investors Wednesday that it will add about $8 billion to its EV developmen­t spending from this year to 2025. That would bring the total to nearly $20 billion as Ford begins to develop and build batteries in a joint venture with SK Innovation of Korea.

“Today is show, not tell time, for the Ford team,” CEO Jim Farley said at the start of the presentati­on.

Wall Street liked what it heard and shares surged more than 8% to levels not seen in about five years.

Farley said the company’s financial performanc­e hasn’t been acceptable in recent years, but it has accelerate­d its turnaround plan and made progress in the past few quarters. The company is now generating cash flow so it can grow the scale of its electric and commercial vehicle businesses, he said. Ford predicted it would post an 8% pretax profit margin in 2023.

The company also announced it would create a separate business called Ford Pro that will focus on commercial and government fleet buyers. It also expects to have about 1 million vehicles capable of getting over-the-internet software updates by the end of this year. Ford says it will have more vehicles capable of this than Tesla by July of 2022.

In the U.S., Ford’s largest market, electric vehicles are only 1.2% of Ford’s sales through April. Ford currently offers only one all-electric vehicle, the Mustang Mach-E SUV, but by next spring it will have an all-electric F-150 pickup and a battery powered Transit big commercial van on the roads. The company said 70,000 customers have put down $100 deposits to reserve an electric F-150 in the week since it was unveiled. Ford’s F-Series pickup is the top-selling vehicle in the U.S.

Ford said it plans a new reardrive, all-wheel-drive electric vehicle architectu­re to bring a new generation of high-sales vehicles, including an electric Ford Explorer SUV and other larger SUVs with two and three rows of seats.

The company also plans additional cargo vans and pickup trucks from the new architectu­re, and it expects one third of pickup truck sales to be fully electric by 2030, said Hau Thai-Tang, the company’s product developmen­t chief.

Ford also will use small-vehicle modular architectu­re from partner Volkswagen to bring small and midsize electric vehicles to Europe, where demand for smaller vehicles is higher, ThaiTang said.

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