ARTICLE AD BOX
By Daniel Thomas
Business reporter, New York
Ford has announced a major investment in electric vehicle (EV) production in the US, promising to build its biggest ever factory in Tennessee, and two battery parks in Kentucky.
The US carmaker said the $11.4bn plan would create 11,000 jobs and help "lead America's shift" to electrification.
It hopes that 40-50% of the cars it sells will be zero emission by 2030, in line with a Biden administration goal.
Yet the government investment needed to make it happen is still in question.
Ford said its Tennessee factory - called Blue Oval City - will cover a 6-square-mile area and build next-generation electric pickup trucks and batteries from 2025.
Its battery parks in Kentucky will power a new line-up of Ford and Lincoln EVs.
"This is our moment - our biggest investment ever - to help build a better future for America," said Jim Farley, Ford's president and chief executive. "We are moving now to deliver breakthrough electric vehicles for the many rather than the few."
Ford has already ramped up investment in EV production at its Texas and Michigan plants. It said it would be making the new investments in partnership with SK Innovation, a South Korean battery maker.
Outside of a few major metropolitan areas, EVs still aren't very common in the US and the country accounted for just 2% of new EV sales globally last year.
The Biden administration hopes to change this with tougher tailpipe emissions rules from 2026 and billions of dollars of spending on new charging points and consumer incentives.
However, the cash is allocated in two spending bills that Democrat leaders still need to get through a divided Senate.
There will be a vote on the first - a $1tn infrastructure plan - this Thursday and it appears to have enough bi-partisan support to pass.
But a second, $3.5tn bill - which focuses on widening America's social safety net - is opposed by every Republican and some moderate Democrats who say it is too expensive in its current form.
Ford told the BBC its announcement was not timed to coincide with this week's voting on Capitol Hill.
But it said supports the passage of both bills, which would "help more Americans get into electric vehicles, while at the same time supporting American manufacturing and union jobs".