
Back in February, Ford CEO Jim Farley announced that they would be collaborating with China-based company Contemporary Amperex Technology to construct the said electric-vehicle battery plant, which is to be Ford's first battery plant of its kind to enter operations, scheduled to open in 2026. Once it is operational, it will manufacture lithium-iron phosphate batteries. The announcement of resumption is said to be a big shift from the promised 2,500 jobs and $3.5 billion investment revealed earlier this year by the car brand and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. "Today's generational investment by an iconic American company will uplift local families, small businesses and the entire community and help our state continue leading the future of mobility and electrification," Whitmer said at the time. "Let's continue bringing the supply chain of electric vehicles, chips and batteries home while creating thousands of good-paying jobs and revitalizing every region of our state." Ford spokesman Mark Truby acknowledged that the company's cuts almost certainly mean the state will reduce the roughly $1.8 billion promised in taxpayer subsidies for the megadevelopment. "I think we're all aware EV adoption is growing, and we expect that to continue, actually. But it's not growing at the pace that I think ourselves and the industry had expected," Truby said. "We want to be really disciplined about how we allocate capital and think about matching production and future capacity based on demand." For Michigan State House Republican Leader Matt Hall, the bad deal the governor and Democrats negotiated for Michigan taxpayers just got a whole lot worse. "Even with Democrats' premature push for electric vehicles and $1.8 billion in state incentives, Ford is cutting back the project and slashing job creation because most people just won't buy unaffordable, inconvenient EVs," he pointed out.Ford Motor said Tuesday that it was resuming work on an electric vehicle battery plant in Michigan but significantly scaling back its plans in part because of slow EV adoption in the United States. https://t.co/nPaUGJEiXS
— NYTimes Tech (@nytimestech) November 22, 2023
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