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Ford’s EV program isn’t going as planned. Crosstown rival General Motors has raced ahead to become America’s second best-selling EV brand behind Tesla. And Ford’s two main consumer offerings, the F-150 Lightning and Mustang Mach-E are strong products, but they’re not delivering profits the way Ford wants yet and they’re aging.

Worse, Ford CEO Jim Farley is sounding the alarm about China’s lead in the EV race and what could happen if—or perhaps when—that country’s affordable electric options come stateside.

Now, Ford needs new EVs developed from the ground up, designed to challenge competitors—all by being more affordable. During its second quarter earnings call, Farley said that Ford will reveal more details about its future EVs on August 11. The new platform will be a “Model T moment” for the brand, Fatley said, hinting at EVs hitting the reset button at the company as competition grows.

The automaker revealed last year that it has a small “skunkworks” team that is hard at work on a new platform that will underpin at least two low-cost EVs: likely a midsize truck and a compact crossover. The team was formed sometime in 2021 and includes a bevy of hired talent from EV brands like Tesla, Rivian and Lucid.

Ford Explorer Platform

Europe’s new Ford Explorer EV uses Volkswagen’s MEB electric platform, pictured here. But Ford’s new EV platform should be smaller, simpler and lower in cost to make. 

InsideEVs

Ford has been pretty tight-lipped about the technical specifics of its EV project, but it’s possible that it might begin with a new electric truck, potentially the size of a Ranger. Separately, the company has also said that it was developing a next-generation electric truck codenamed “Project T3.”

What Do We Know About Ford’s Affordable EV Program?

Unlike Ford’s previous efforts, we do know that Ford is intentionally not going all out on big batteries for this platform. Farley thinks that Ford’s EV future is based on volume and low costs, and one way it plans to keep costs down and prices cheap is by restricting battery sizes. Bigger batteries mean higher prices because that’s the most expensive part of an EV.

EV buyers are price sensitive and the diminishing returns of range on large batteries and the elevated costs associated with them aren’t getting buyers behind the wheel like the brand thought.

The platform that will underpin Ford’s future EVs is small, with only about 100 people, many of whom are made up of talent from various EV startups. Farley says the team is ruthlessly focused on cost and efficiency. It views Tesla and Chinese EVs as the “ultimate competition.” He also dropped a bombshell last year, revealing on the Fully Charged Show podcast that he was driving a Xiaomi SU7 sedan imported from China.

We know that unlike the Mach-E and Lightning, which are adapted from gas car platforms, the new truck will be totally built from the ground up; it also won’t be Volkswagen’s MEB platform used to make the European Explorer and Capri, which is pictured above. 

More From Our Everything We Know Series

What Will The Ford Affordable EV Look Like?

That’s something we won’t know for a while. Ford’s EV lineup could follow a Mach-E-like theme. It could also be styled to be more in line with Ford’s European EVs, like the new Capri or Explorer EV. It could take on many forms, considering it’s a new platform that will underpin Ford’s future EVs.

Ford Compact Crossover EV front 2

Ford Compact Crossover EV front 2

InsideEVs

Again, we know the EV—really, an EV platform—will take several body styles, including a small crossover and a midsize pickup truck. 

Ford Compact Truck EV rear 2

Ford Compact Truck EV rear 2

InsideEVs

Recently, Farley explained that Ford’s low-cost EVs will focus on “work and adventure” and that the platform will be “leveraged among many top hats,” so we can expect a whole slew of products for multiple types of customers.

There is also talk of an EV focused on rideshare customers; perhaps Ford is developing something similar to the BYD D1 or Kia Niro Plus.

Ford Compact Crossover EV rear 2

Ford Compact Crossover EV rear 2

InsideEVs

What About Performance, Charging And Range?

Ford has said little about the range goals of its low-cost EVs. But once again, it’s adamant that none of them will have super-sized batteries. Don’t expect the 200+ kWh battery or nearly 1,000 horsepower setup we’ve seen in GM’s Ultium platform trucks like the GMC Hummer EV.

InsideEVs recently visited the automaker’s $3 billion BlueOval Battery Park Michigan, where it will start manufacturing low-cost lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries from 2026 onwards, licensing the technology from China’s CATL. The plant is expected to generation 1,700 manufacturing jobs and make about 20 gigawatt-hours of LFP batteries annually, enough to power about 250,000 EVs.

Ford’s EVs will likely have a NACS port integrated natively and be able to access Tesla Superchargers on release.

When Will Ford’s Affordable EVs Go On Sale?

Ford hasn’t offered an exact date of sale for its new EV projects, but the automaker said it’s due to launch sometime in 2027 and it will “cater to customers who want more for their money—more range, more utility, more useability.”

The Dearborn automaker has not yet confirmed a manufacturing site for the midsize truck yet. It said in 2023 that the Project T3 would be made at its EV campus in West Tennessee, but its assembly plant in Louisville, Kentucky is also a potential site.

Farley said on Ford’s Q2 2024 earnings call that pricing will be under $30,000 for the cheapest products on the platform, but this isn’t necessarily the price point for the midsize EV truck. With Trump’s tariffs, that price target will be hard to achieve.

If so, the crossover should directly rival new, more affordable offerings like the 2026 Chevrolet Bolt EUV, the Jeep Renegade, the Kia EV3, and possibly Tesla’s smaller and cheaper new model—and, of course, whatever comes our way out of China.

A truly affordable electric truck doesn’t exist in the U.S. The Tesla Cybertruck, Rivian R1T, and Chevy Silverado EV all start above $60,000, while the Ford F-150 Lightning opens at $52,000. Ford may see an opening to undercut them all with a cheaper model—a move that could give it a serious edge if it manages to deliver.

And that will end up being its real test.

Speculative renders credit Theophilus Chin for InsideEVs

Contact the author: kevin.williams@insideevs.com 

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