By Ben Klayman
DETROIT (Reuters) – Ford Motor Co on Thursday said it will invest $3.7 billion in assembly plants in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri for production of both electric and gasoline-powered vehicles.
Ford said $2.3 billion of the total investment will be spent on EVs, part of the $50 billion in EV spending through 2026 it previously outlined.
Ford officials said the company will receive incentive packages of about $150 million and about $200 million from Michigan and Ohio, respectively.
As part of the investments, the Michigan-based automaker said it will add more than 6,200 hourly jobs and convert 3,000 temporary workers into full-time employees who will receive health-care benefits and higher pay. It also will add a new electric commercial vehicle to its lineup mid-decade.
Ford in March said it was boosting its spending on EVs to $50 billion through 2026, up from $30 billion previously. It also said it would run its EV and internal combustion engine (ICE) businesses as separate units in a move aimed at catching EV industry leader Tesla.
The company has said it plans to build more than 2 million EVs a year globally by the end of 2026, about one-third of its global production.
Ford on Thursday said it will invest $2 billion at three plants in Michigan to increase production of the new F-150 Lightning pickup truck to 150,000 – an action it previously outlined in April – as well as build new versions of the Ranger pickup and Mustang sports car. The new jobs in the state will total 3,200.
The company’s Ohio operations will see $1.6 billion in investment and the creation of almost 1,900 jobs, including the new commercial vehicle. The company did not provide details on the vehicle to be built in Avon Lake, but Auto Forecast Solutions said it will be the next generation of the e-Transit van, starting in 2026.
About $100 million will be spent in Missouri to add 1,100 workers for a third shift at an assembly plant outside Kansas City to boost production of the electric and gas Transit vans, Ford said.
Ford employed about 56,000 U.S. hourly workers at the end of 2021. They are represented by the United Auto Workers union, with which Ford will negotiate a new labor agreement next year.
Ford also said $1 billion of Thursday’s total will be spent over the next five years to “improve workplace environments” in the plants, including providing better access to healthy food, installing EV chargers in parking lots, and improved security and lighting in plant parking lots.
(Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Mark Porter)