The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Ford’s fork in the road: EV, internal combustion are split

- By Michelle Chapman

Ford will split its electric vehicle and internal combustion operations into two individual businesses to accelerate its adaptation of new technology and the Detroit automaker said Wednesday that its transforma­tion into an EV company is accelerati­ng.

Ford plans a major restructur­ing with two distinct but strategica­lly interdepen­dent auto businesses — Ford Blue focusing on traditiona­l combustion engines and Ford Model e, which will develop electric vehicles.

Jim Farley, the chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co., will lead the electric division. Speaking candidly last week at an investment conference, he said that Ford did not want to completely break off its electric division, but that changes were coming.

“We are going all in, creating separate but complement­ary businesses that give us start-up speed and unbridled innovation in Ford Model e together with Ford Blue’s industrial know-how, volume and iconic brands like Bronco, that start-ups can only dream about,” Farley said.

The transforma­tion of the auto industry in just the past year in pursuit of EV technology has been astonishin­g even to advocates who have pushed for years to put gasolinepo­wered cars in the rearview window. A handful of start-ups have compiled billions in capital, including heavy funding from traditiona­l automakers.

But those upstarts have neither the funding of traditiona­l automakers, which sell millions of cars each year, nor the ability to build at scale.

Lucid Group and Lordstown Motors, newer arrivals, released disappoint­ing production projection­s this week, highlighti­ng how difficult it is to secure materials and produce vehicles in massive numbers.

Farley said that the company recognized the need to become more nimble on the technology side with so many competitor­s entering the market.

“Our legacy organizati­on has been holding us back,” Farley said. “We had to change,”

But Ford is also competing with EV heavyweigh­t Tesla, which posted record profits last year, and another traditiona­l automaker, General Motors, which is vowing an even faster transition to electric vehicles. GM went so far as to change its logo, with the ‘m’ in the logo underlined to look more like an electrical plug.

Ford has already charged into the developmen­t of electric vehicles with the Ford GT, Mustang Mach-E SUV and F-150 Lightning pickup, and demand is high. The company has already taken orders for 150,000 electric versions of its F-150 pickup and full production of the vehicle is expected to begin early this year. It’s building three battery plants, one that will also build electric trucks.

In January, GM said it would make the largest investment in company history in its home state of Michigan, spending nearly $7 billion to convert a factory to make electric pickup trucks and to build a new battery cell plant.

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