Ford to invest $3.9 billion in new US EV battery plant 

New York, Feb. 14, (dpa/GNA) - US automaker Ford will build a new battery plant in the US state of Michigan, creating around 2,500 jobs when it opens in 2026. 

The company will invest some $3.5 billion to build a new lithium iron phosphate plant, called BlueOval Battery Park Michigan, the company announced Monday. 

The project will be fully-owned by a Ford subsidiary, but will use technology licensed from China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology. 

Ford will have the option to further grow its battery capacity at its Marshall, Michigan, plant, which will be part of a wholly owned Ford subsidiary. 

Ford said it is the first automaker to commit to build both nickel cobalt manganese (NCM) and lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries in the US. 

“LFP batteries are very durable and tolerate more frequent and faster charging while using fewer high-demand, high-cost materials. This lower-cost battery, at scale, will help Ford contain or even further reduce EV prices for customers,” Ford said. 

Ford noted that the LFP batteries will power a variety of next-generation Ford EV passenger vehicles and trucks under development, most of which will be assembled in the US. 

The company said even before the new battery plant opens, it will introduce LFP batteries on Mustang Mach-E this year and F-150 Lightning in 2024 to increase production capacity, with a goal of reducing wait times for customers. 

According to Ford, the battery production facility in Michigan will add about 35 gigawatt hours per year of new battery capacity for Ford in the US initially – capable of powering approximately 400,000 future Ford Evs. 

GNA