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Ford Roars Back: F-150 Production Shifts Into High Gear After Major Hurdles!

Published 4 days ago2 minute read
Ford Roars Back: F-150 Production Shifts Into High Gear After Major Hurdles!

Ford Motor Company is set to significantly boost production of its highly demanded F-Series trucks, including the F-150 and F-Series Super Duty, starting in 2026. This strategic move aims to capitalize on increasing market demand while helping the automaker recover from production setbacks caused by a recent fire at a key aluminum supplier plant. To support this expansion, Ford plans to add approximately 900 new jobs and reassign existing personnel from other facilities.

A substantial part of this production increase will involve shifting 500 workers who were previously engaged in F-150 Lightning electric pickup production. These employees will be transferred from the idled Lightning plant to manufacturing gas-powered and hybrid trucks, which Ford considers more profitable and less reliant on aluminum, thus minimizing the effects of supply chain disruptions. Production of the F-150 Lightning was temporarily suspended earlier this month due to slower-than-expected EV sales, a trend unlikely to improve following the discontinuation of federal incentives. Ford executives have not yet provided a specific timeline for resuming Lightning production.

To facilitate the ramp-up, Ford will establish a third crew of 1,200 workers at its Ford Rouge Complex in Dearborn. Additionally, production capabilities will be expanded at both the Dearborn Stamping Plant and Dearborn Diversified Manufacturing Plant. The Kentucky Truck Plant will also see an expansion, with the addition of 100 new workers. Altogether, these measures are projected to increase Ford’s annual truck output by 50,000 units, including 45,000 from Dearborn and 5,000 from Kentucky. The increased volume is expected to begin rolling off assembly lines in the first quarter of 2026, followed by a gradual production ramp-up.

This decision follows a major financial hit stemming from the September fire at the Novelis aluminum plant in Oswego, New York, which disrupted Ford’s aluminum supply chain. The incident is estimated to have caused $1.5 billion to $2 billion in profit losses, as disclosed in Ford’s third-quarter earnings report, prompting the company to revise its full-year earnings guidance downward.

Despite these challenges, Ford’s Q3 financial results showed resilience, with net income rising to $2.4 billion, up sharply from $900 million in the same quarter last year. Adjusted income reached $2.6 billion, and revenue climbed 9 percent to a record $50.5 billion. While the Novelis fire created an unexpected financial setback, Ford anticipates that additional impacts from tariffs will be about $1 billion—roughly half of earlier estimates.

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