‘Believe it:’ Ford eyes EV market leadership with launch of F-150 Lightning

Dearborn — Ford Motor Co. is officially planting its flag with the launch of an all-electric version of America’s best-selling truck, aiming to overtake Tesla Inc. and lead the electric vehicle market.

Blue Oval brass said as much during the F-150 Lightning’s formal launch Tuesday at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center, a new EV manufacturing facility at Ford’s historic Rouge complex that already has been expanded to boost production capacity to 150,000 units annually. The event highlighted the symbolic resonance of the Rouge, the employees building the Lightning, customers (some of whom were invited) and the automaker’s electric ambitions.

“We have very intention of being the No. 1 electric pickup maker,” CEO Jim Farley said. “And then, with the huge investments — $50 billion in EVs, battery manufacturing, our expanded lineup which you have not seen yet — we plan to challenge Tesla and all comers to become the top EV maker in the world.

“That’s something that no one would have believed just two years ago from us. Take a look at this truck and believe it.”

Jim Farley, CEO of Ford, poses with an F-150 Lightning during a launch celebration of the all electric truck at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center, in Dearborn, April 26, 2022.

Lightnings will begin shipping to customers in the next few days, Farley said, starting with the Ford Pro model aimed at commercial customers. That’s where the rubber meets the road. 

“More and more customers over the next several weeks are going to start getting their Lightnings. And that’s going to be the real test of how people really feel about an electric truck,” said Sam Abuelsamid, an autos analyst at Guidehouse Insights.

“This is going to be the first really high-volume electric truck,” he added. “And because of the segment that this is in — this is the most popular segment in the US market — the response to this vehicle is going to be a great indicator of how the American consumer is going to take to EVs over the coming years.”

For Stanton Hunter of New Jersey, the Lightning will be his first pickup truck as well as his first EV. He has a Lightning on order, with a build date scheduled in June, and was among the customers Ford invited to the launch. 

“I’ve always wanted a pickup truck,” Hunter said. “But gas mileage was never really agreeing with me. So I decided that this is probably the best time to do it.”

Underscoring one possible challenge now facing Ford, though: Hunter initially planned to buy a Bronco SUV, which Ford resurrected last year, but he was so far down the reservation list that he jumped over to the Lightning when orders for the truck opened.

Already, Ford executives have repeatedly said the company is oversubscribed on its first wave of EVs. The automaker capped reservations on the Lightning after they got 200,000, and the 2022 model year is no longer available for retail orders. Model year 2023 order bank (for existing reservation holders) will open in the summer for deliveries in the fall.

A Ford F-150 Lightning truck sits in front of the Ford world headquarters, in Dearborn, April 26, 2022.

Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford acknowledged that it’s a bit of a dilemma, saying that he recently talked with would-be Bronco customers at an event in Texas who are still waiting for build dates for their vehicles.

“So it’s really across a lot of our hot products, and we’re doing everything we can to try and communicate with them,” he said. “We probably need to do a better job of that.”

But between the coronavirus pandemic, demand exceeding supply for raw materials needed for EV batteries, an ongoing global semiconductor chip shortage and other supply chain issues, production has been constrained.

“The good news is, there’s tremendous demand for our products, but it is frustrating that we can’t build them in a timely fashion. Our team has done a great job of breaking bottlenecks, but then new ones pop up,” Bill Ford said. “That’s just the world we’re in, unfortunately. But we don’t want to lose those customers. We don’t them to walk away, and we’re doing everything we can to accommodate them.”

He also acknowledged that the company is “looking” at investing further down the supply chain to shore up the minerals needed to build batteries.

Bill Ford, executive chairman of Ford Motor Co., speaks to the crowd about the the F-150 Lightning during a launch celebration at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center, in Dearborn, April 26, 2022.

Production constraints aside, Ford executives on Tuesday struck an upbeat note about what an electric F-150 means for the future of not just the company, but the country as a whole.

“This moment is every bit as important to this company and to this country as when the Model T first started rolling off the assembly line,” Bill Ford said. “Back then, we were the first company to bring automobiles to everybody. Now, we’re the first company to build electric trucks for everybody — way ahead of anyone else.”