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Wolf Man

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Full Story with video here: https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/ford-electric-vehicle-battery-facility-michigan

The 270,000-square-foot facility will open in Romulus, Michigan, next year and house up to 200 engineers, researchers, purchasing and finance leaders
By Lucas Manfredi FOXBusiness


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Ford Motor Company is doubling down on its push towards electric vehicles with a new battery facility in Romulus, Michigan, set to open next year.

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Ford will refurbish an existing 270,000-square-foot facility, which will house up to 200 engineers, researchers, purchasing and finance leaders. The facility will feature "world-class pilot-scale equipment for electrode, cell and array design and manufacturing engineering and innovation."

The new collaborative learning lab, dubbed Ford Ion Park, represents $100 million of the automaker's total $185 million investment in developing, testing and building electric vehicle battery cells and cell arrays. It is also part of the company's $30 billion investment in electrification by 2025.

"Ford already is delivering on our plan to lead the electric revolution with strong new vehicles including Mustang Mach-E, 2022 E-Transit available late 2021 and the 2022 F-150 Lightning available from spring next year," Ford Ion Park director Anand Sankaran said in a statement. "The new lab will help Ford speed up the battery development process to deliver even more capable, affordable batteries and is part of Ford’s renewed commitment to making Michigan a centerpiece of its focus on EVs."


READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS BY CLICKING HERE

The latest investment comes after Ford announced that its new all-electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck will be assembled at its Rogue Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn, Michigan, adding 500 new direct jobs.

In May, Ford also renamed its Van Dyle Transmission Plant to the Van Dyke Electric Powertrain Center and said it would expand its production line to produce electric motors and electric transaxles for hybrid and fully electric vehicles, retaining a total of 225 Michigan jobs.

"Ford’s investment in battery research and development in Romulus will support hundreds of good-paying jobs, attract innovative talent to Michigan, and help us continue leading the world in advanced mobility and manufacturing," Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said. "Ford is an American icon that has left its mark on the world over a century, and with the research that will take place at Ford Ion Park, they will shape the next century while reducing emissions and accelerating electrification."

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

In June, Ford's sales of electrified vehicles increased 117% for the month and set a half-year record of 56,570 vehicles. Meanwhile, Ford's overall vehicle sales for the month plummeted 26.9% year-over-year as the auto industry continues to feel the pain from an ongoing semiconductor chip shortage.


How About A 2 For Tuesday! Here's a similar story from the Detroit Free Press


https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/ford/2021/07/27/ford-ion-park-romulus-ev/5385397001/

Ford picks Romulus for $100M battery research center

Eric D. Lawrence
Detroit Free Press


Ford has selected Romulus as the location for its $100 million Ion Park battery research center.

The project is part of a larger “$185 million investment in developing, testing, and building vehicle battery cells and cell arrays.” Ford said it plans to invest $30 billion in electrification by 2025, with a commitment to making Michigan a centerpiece of its focus on electric vehicles.

In what is being called Phase One, the company is expecting to employ 200 full-time engineers within 18 months of the site being renovated. The 270,000-square-foot facility was formerly part of space operated by battery maker A123 Systems, which, in 2017, announced it was closing the location because of limited demand at the time for electric vehicle batteries in North America, according to Crain’s Detroit Business.

In the years since, each of the Detroit Three has made major commitments to boost electric vehicle production.

In its announcement Tuesday, Ford touted both current and soon-to-arrive electric vehicles.
“Ford already is delivering on our plan to lead the electric revolution with strong new vehicles including Mustang Mach-E, 2022 E-Transit available late 2021 and the 2022 F-150 Lightning available from spring next year,” Anand Sankaran, Ford Ion Park director, said in a news release.

“The new lab will help Ford speed up the battery development process to deliver even more capable, affordable batteries and is part of Ford’s renewed commitment to making Michigan a centerpiece of its focus on EVs.”

Ford spokesman Martin Gunsberg said the company has now purchased the property, which is at Ecorse and Cogswell roads. When asked about the purchase price, he said that’s part of the $100 million investment.

In its announcement, Ford noted that it had "also repositioned its half-century-old Van Dyke Transmission Plant in May — renaming it the Van Dyke Electric Powertrain Center and expanding its production line to produce electric motors and electric transaxles for hybrid and fully electric vehicles, retaining a total of 225 Michigan jobs."

A Free Press report in April on Ford’s plan to build Ion Park said that “part of the inspiration for this effort is driven by supply chain challenges in recent months that have created costly disruptions in the automotive industry and others.”

More:Stellantis CEO on weather events pushing electrification: Our company is ready
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More:Ford to accelerate battery development with $185M 'Ford Ion Park' lab in 2022

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer praised the project.

“Ford’s investment in battery research and development in Romulus will support hundreds of good-paying jobs, attract innovative talent to Michigan, and help us continue leading the world in advanced mobility and manufacturing,” Whitmer said in a news release.

The announcement of the Romulus site selection was paired with an approval by the Michigan Economic Development Corp. of a renaissance zone transfer. Renaissance zones allow companies and residents within the area to avoid certain taxes, including local real property taxes and Michigan's 6-mill state education tax.

Officials on Tuesday said the value of the designation would be $1 million over the remaining four years of the zone designation. Tax benefits decrease in the final three years of any zone designation, according to the MEDC.

“The zones were designed to provide selected communities with a market-based incentive of reduced state or local taxes to encourage new jobs and investment,” according to the MEDC. “Since the program’s inception (in 1996), the local units of government have indicated over 640 projects, which will result in the creation of over 10,100 jobs and over $3 billion in private investment.”

Free Press staff writer JC Reindl contributed to this report.

Contact Eric D. Lawrence: [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @_ericdlawrence. Become a subscriber.
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FordLightning

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Thanks for sharing! The industry is certainly in the midst of changes…
 


 


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