Ford announces $2 billion investment in Louisville assembly plant aimed at cheap EVs
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The Detroit automaker plans to produce a midsize, four-door electric pickup at the Louisville Assembly Plant, slated for 2027.
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August 11, 2025
03:57 PM
CNBC
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In this articleF your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNTwatch now4:0204:02Ford CEO on $2B EV investment: This is the right direction for Ford to turnaround our Money MoversFord on Monday announced it would invest $2 billion in a Louisville, Kentucky, assembly plant aimed at rolling out more affordable electric vehicles.The investment comes on top of $3 billion already planned for a battery park in Michigan
Together the facilities will create or secure nearly 4,000 new jobs, Ford said in a news release."We took a radical apach to a very hard challenge: Create affordable vehicles that delight customers in every way that matters – design, innovation, flexibility, space, driving pleasure, and cost of ownership – and do it with American workers," Ford CEO Jim Farley said in the release.The Detroit automaker's new "Universal EV gram" centered around low-cost EVs will start with a midsize, four-door electric pickup, duced at the Louisville Assembly Plant
That vehicle launch is slated for 2027.Executives had teased the announcement on the company's earnings call as its next "Model T moment." Ford said the starting price of the new EV truck, $30,000, will be roughly the same as the famed Model T, when adjusted for inflation.Ford noted that lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries for the new family of EVs will be assembled in the U.S. and not imported from China.An aerial view as a Ford sign stands on the sales lot of the Metro Ford dealership on May 06, 2025 in Miami, Florida
Joe Raedle | Getty ImagesFarley said during an event in Louisville on Monday that the announcement comes as the automotive industry is at a crossroads because of new nology and competition."We knew that the Chinese would be the major player for us globally, companies BYD, new startups from around the world, big nology has their ambition in the auto space
They're all coming for us, legacy automotive companies," Farley said. "We needed a radical apach and a really tough challenge to create an affordable vehicle."The changes also come as Ford and other U.S. manufacturers are navigating shifting EV policies under President Donald Trump, including an end to EV tax credits that will take effect after Sept. 30.Ford said Monday that the Louisville plant will "secure" 2,200 jobs, but noted that once it's retooled for EV duction, it will employ 600 fewer workers than in its current configuration.According to the Ford website, the plant employed more than 3,000 employees as of April 2024.Farley told CNBC's Phil LeBeau during an interview with "Squawk on the Street" on Monday that the automaker continues to add new jobs elsewhere."Ford's the only car company in America that's added 13,000 jobs since the recession
We're not going to stop," Farley said.— CNBC's Phil LeBeau contributed to this report.Correction: This article has been d to correct that the Louisville Assembly Plant will secure 2,200 jobs
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