business
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Honda's $1.2B EV Push Creates 1,000 Jobs in Lincoln, Alabama
National Desk
May 2, 2026
Honda Manufacturing of Alabama announced a $1.2 billion investment Thursday to expand electric vehicle manufacturing capacity at its Lincoln plant, located 50 miles east of Birmingham in Talladega County. The move will create 1,000 high-paying jobs, bolstering the plant's workforce that already employs thousands since its opening in November 2001. Officials say production enhancements will support Honda's North American EV strategy, aligning with the company's $3 billion capital investment in the facility to date.[4]
The Lincoln plant, Honda's largest auto assembly operation outside Japan, recently absorbed engine component production from Ohio's Anna Engine Plant in 2023 to free up space for EV-related retooling there.[5][6] This internal shift underscores Alabama's growing role in Honda's electrification pivot, even as the company invests heavily in Ohio battery plants.[1][2] The expansion comes amid pilot programs at Lincoln, including an August 2024 all-electric Peterbilt 579EV truck rollout by Virginia Transportation Corp. for hauling vehicles to the CSX railhead, backed by Alabama Power and the Alabama Clean Fuels Coalition.[3]
Local impact is immediate: The 1,000 jobs target skilled manufacturing roles, injecting economic vitality into Lincoln's 6,000-resident community and surrounding Talladega County, where auto jobs anchor the economy. Honda executives, including Alabama Auto Plant General Manager Osama Noori, emphasized the investment's focus on sustainable mobility. As EV demand surges, Alabama positions itself as a Southern EV hub alongside rivals like Hyundai in Montgomery.


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