Ford Motor Company announced plans on September 27, 2021, to build two new environmentally and technologically advanced campuses in Tennessee and Kentucky to produce the next generation of electric F-Series trucks and batteries to power future Ford and Lincoln electric vehicles (EVs).[1] Ford and its partner SK Innovation, a South Korean energy developer, plan to invest $11.4 billion—the largest investment in EVs at one time by an automotive manufacturer in the U.S—and create nearly 11,000 new jobs at the Tennessee and Kentucky “mega-sites.”
The new $5.6 billion campus in Stanton, Tennessee, called Blue Oval City, will create approximately 6,000 new jobs and cover almost 6 square miles. The campus will build next-generation electric F-Series pickups and will include a BlueOvalSK battery plant, key suppliers, and recycling. The Tennessee plant will be carbon neutral with zero waste to landfills once fully operational. In Glendale, Kentucky, Ford will work with SK Innovation to build two battery plants, the $5.8 billion BlueOvalSK Battery Park. The plants will create 5,000 jobs and are intended to supply Ford’s North American assembly plants with locally assembled batteries. The three new battery plants will enable 129 GWh a year of U.S. production capacity for Ford. Investments in the new battery plants are planned to be made via BlueOvalSK, a new joint venture to be formed by Ford and SK Innovation.
[1] https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/news/2021/09/27/ford-to-lead-americas-shift-to-electric-vehicles.html