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Bill Ford Jr. says company's EVs will be green but focus on performance

'Electrification has come to the point that you can do both'

It's no secret that Ford is working on a Mustang-inspired electric crossover, possibly to be called the "Mach E" or maybe "Mach-E," that will have a range of more than 300 miles, and it reportedly showed it to top dealers during the Blue Oval's annual confab last fall in Las Vegas.

But a comment Monday from Ford Chairman Bill Ford Jr. highlights a shift in how the company views EVs going forward, and suggests that a performance-oriented crossover EV may be closer to the norm than an outlier.

"When we first started talking about electrification, there was this thought that there had to be a tradeoff: It was either going to be green and boring and no fun, or really exciting but burn a lot of fossil fuels," Automotive News quoted Ford as saying during a luncheon event. "Electrification has come to the point that you can do both."


That represents a significant evolution in the automaker's thinking from its first go-round on electric vehicles, represented by the likes of the Focus Electric and the C-Max plug-in hybrid. Both focused more on maximizing fuel economy than horsepower, and both are now discontinued. That's left Ford relatively bereft of electrified options — though the Fusion Energi PHEV lives on, for now — at a time when it's ramping up efforts around EVs via its new Team Edison unit and is feeling pressured by Wall Street to demonstrate that it has a solid vision for electrification, among other things.

Beyond the battery-electric crossover, which arrives in 2020, we know that Ford is already planning a hybrid Mustang for 2020 and is mulling the idea of an all-electric variant of the venerable pony car. It's also working on an all-electric version of its best-selling F-150.

Pairing electrification with the kind of muscle traditionally reserved for big, thirsty combustion engines is hardly a novel strategy these days. It's practically Rivian's raison d'être, and it has echoes in EVs like the next-generation Tesla Roadster and the upcoming Porsche Taycan. It just might be a smart bet by Ford, and it could also be one reason that its partnership talks with Volkswagen, while reportedly nearing fruit on developing self-driving vehicles, are struggling to find common ground for teaming on EVs.

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