AbleGuy
Officious Intermeddler
It might be an under-exaggeration to say that the market for electric vehicles is rapidly cooling down.
Ford Motor Co. just announced that it is pulling the plug on its EV trucks after a costly strategy failed to deliver, retreating from the electric strategy it vowed to go all in on just eight years ago.

The company said it will take an ENORMOUS $19.5 billion in charges, one of the auto industry’s biggest write-downs to date.
“Instead of plowing billions into the future knowing these large EVs will never make money, we are pivoting,” said Ford Chief Executive Jim Farley. Ford plans to lean harder on gas-powered vehicles and ramp up hybrids and extended-range EVs that include onboard gasoline engines.
It will also stop making the all-electric F-150 Lightning.
(from: https://www.entrepreneur.com/business-news/ford-takes-a-195-billion-hit-on-its-ev-trucks/500887)
And it also just canceled a $6.5 billion battery agreement with LG Energy Solution Ltd. as it continues to shrink its plans for electric vehicles.
Ford notified LG of the canceled order on Wednesday
Also… “The European Commission backed away from what had been the world’s most aggressive timeline for phasing out internal-combustion engines, granting manufacturers and consumers more time to move off gasoline.
And…General Motors (GM) Co. recently incurred $1.6 billion in charges tied to paring EV production capacity, and flagged more such moves may be in the offing.
And…Stellantis NV has scrapped plans for a fully electric Ram pickup and revived gas-guzzling V-8 engines that it will have no trouble selling in a US market that has hollowed out fuel economy and emissions standards.”
(From: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-car-transition-unravels-slowly-164203804.html)
It looks like hybrids are going to be the focus of many auto makers next, instead of fully electric vehicles.
So what do you guys think is going on?
How dead is the EV market today?
How dead will it be tomorrow?
If any of you expo members have a Ford Lightning, what does killing that vehicle off so quickly mean to your sense of continued ownership?
Ford Motor Co. just announced that it is pulling the plug on its EV trucks after a costly strategy failed to deliver, retreating from the electric strategy it vowed to go all in on just eight years ago.

The company said it will take an ENORMOUS $19.5 billion in charges, one of the auto industry’s biggest write-downs to date.
“Instead of plowing billions into the future knowing these large EVs will never make money, we are pivoting,” said Ford Chief Executive Jim Farley. Ford plans to lean harder on gas-powered vehicles and ramp up hybrids and extended-range EVs that include onboard gasoline engines.
It will also stop making the all-electric F-150 Lightning.
(from: https://www.entrepreneur.com/business-news/ford-takes-a-195-billion-hit-on-its-ev-trucks/500887)
And it also just canceled a $6.5 billion battery agreement with LG Energy Solution Ltd. as it continues to shrink its plans for electric vehicles.
Ford notified LG of the canceled order on Wednesday
Also… “The European Commission backed away from what had been the world’s most aggressive timeline for phasing out internal-combustion engines, granting manufacturers and consumers more time to move off gasoline.
And…General Motors (GM) Co. recently incurred $1.6 billion in charges tied to paring EV production capacity, and flagged more such moves may be in the offing.
And…Stellantis NV has scrapped plans for a fully electric Ram pickup and revived gas-guzzling V-8 engines that it will have no trouble selling in a US market that has hollowed out fuel economy and emissions standards.”
(From: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-car-transition-unravels-slowly-164203804.html)
It looks like hybrids are going to be the focus of many auto makers next, instead of fully electric vehicles.
So what do you guys think is going on?
How dead is the EV market today?
How dead will it be tomorrow?
If any of you expo members have a Ford Lightning, what does killing that vehicle off so quickly mean to your sense of continued ownership?
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