Ford's $5.6B Stanton Plant Pivots to Gas Trucks, Delays EV Production
The Tennessee truck plant near Stanton, initially designed to roll out Ford's next-generation electric pickup trucks, is now being reconfigured to produce gasoline-powered vehicles instead. Ford announced the production change would begin in 2029, marking a significant delay from the original 2025 target date when the company first unveiled the project in September 2021.
Governor Bill Lee's office attributed the shift to "evolving consumer preferences in the automotive market," but state Rep. Karen Camper of Memphis pointed to the Trump administration's plans to roll back electric vehicle tax credits established under the Biden presidency. The automotive industry has faced intensifying pressure as EV demand, particularly for electric trucks, remains limited among consumers who continue favoring traditional gasoline engines.
The 4,100-acre West Tennessee Megasite in Haywood County, located just 12 miles from Brownsville and accessible via Interstate 40, will still house Ford's assembly plant alongside SK Innovation's battery manufacturing facility and a battery recycling center. The complex includes a state-of-the-art Tennessee College of Applied Technology campus designed to train workers for the high-tech manufacturing positions.
State incentives for the project reached $884 million, including infrastructure improvements and workforce development grants. Despite the production pivot, Ford maintains its commitment to West Tennessee operations. The facility remains one of the largest automotive manufacturing complexes in the United States and represents the single largest private investment in Tennessee history.
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