Ford EV investments in southeast Michigan and Missouri to add hundreds of jobs

Ford Motor Co. will invest hundreds of millions of dollars and add hundreds of jobs in southeast Michigan and Missouri as it takes the latest steps in electrifying its most popular and iconic nameplates.

The Dearborn automaker announced Tuesday it will build the upcoming E-Transit — a fully electric version of its bestselling Transit cargo van — at its Kansas City Assembly plant, bringing a $100 million investment and 150 full-time, permanent jobs to the facility in Claycomo, Missouri.

Ford unveiled plans in September for the all-new Rouge Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn where it will build the all-electric F-150 by mid-2022.

Additionally, the Blue Oval said it will add or retain a total of 425 jobs in Dearborn and Sterling Heights to support assembly of electric vehicles and parts at facilities there.

The company said Tuesday it plans to invest $150 million in its Van Dyke Transmission plant in Sterling Heights to build e-motors and e-transaxles beginning in 2021, which will retain 225 jobs there.

Ford also said that interest in the forthcoming electric F-150 is so strong that it will increase production plans by 50% at its Dearborn Truck plant where it will be built, and add 200 jobs. That’s in addition to 300 previously announced jobs tied to the electric truck. It declined to say what the original production target was.

The electric F-150 will be built at Ford's Dearborn-based Rouge Center, shown here in a an artist sketch.

The automaker said in September it would invest $700 million at the historic Rouge complex in Dearborn to support production of the new F-150 lineup, including  battery-powered pickup slated for release in 2022. The investment includes a new, 500,000-square-foot EV manufacturing facility at Dearborn Truck where the electric F-150 will be built.

Production on a redesigned F-150, including a hybrid version, is now underway at Kansas City Assembly and at Dearborn Truck.

The investment announcements come ahead of the Thursday reveal of the E-Transit, which is slated for release in late 2021 for model year 2022. Ford executives have said the automaker’s robust and highly profitable commercial vehicle business will play a key role in the company’s electric-vehicle strategy, as business customers look to take advantage of the reduced maintenance time, lower overall costs and data-driven services that technologically advanced trucks and vans promise.

A teaser photo of the E-Transit, which will premiere Thursday.

“Ford’s strategy is different — we are delivering affordable, capable electric vehicles in the heart of the retail and commercial market rather than six-figure status vehicles,” Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford’s Americas and International Markets Group, said in a statement. “With the stunning Mustang Mach-E, an all-electric F-150 and the new E-Transit, our first wave of EVs in North America will introduce a whole new generation to EVs.”

Ford’s strategy of using commercial vehicles as an entry point into the EV market makes sense, Autotrader executive analyst Michelle Krebs said, because of what the automaker can learn from those digitally connected vehicles and because Ford already is such a strong player in the commercial market.

“You get big numbers and you get predictable patterns of these vehicles, and you can collect a lot of data and a lot of information about how the vehicles behave, and how they’re used, where they go,” she said. “It also helps them plan an EV infrastructure. … It becomes a little laboratory that’s much more controllable.”