Electric-truck edge: Idle Ford, GM and Stellantis plants could prove the difference
Skip to main content
Sister Publication Links
  • Automotive News Canada
  • Automotive News Europe
  • Automotive News China
  • Automobilwoche
AN-LOGO-BLUE
Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • Account
  • login
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Dealers
    • Automakers & Suppliers
    • News by Brand
    • Cars & Concepts
    • Coronavirus Coverage
    • China
    • Shift
    • Mobility Report
    • Special Reports
    • Digital Edition Archive
    • This Week's Issue
    • Manheim Statesville workers helped with the clinic.
      Drive right up to get your vaccination in auction lane
      Ford: No going back to the old way of work
      Address vaccine doubts at work to lead U.S. back
      Group may fight rejection of COVID claim
    • Tesla store in China
      Tesla models banned by China military over camera concerns
      Faraday hires executive of JLR’s JV as China chief
      Baidu to test paid robotaxi services
      BYD-rtrs web.jpg
      BYD hires engineers for Europe EV battery plant
    • 3D-printing a Porsche: Making concepts matter
      The industry is racing to modernize the way in which EVs are built
      As EV output explodes in China, e-axle drive assembly automates
      Plus to roll big rigs on a ‘continuum' toward self-driving future
    • Abandoned e-scooters are police business in Ann Arbor, Mich.
      Dumped scooter? Call 911
      Free2Move offers short-term rentals in Washington, D.C.
      Free2Move expands to West Coast
      Rivian's challenge: Maintain a personal touch long term
      Cars outside of VW's Wolfsburg plant
      VW takes a page from Tesla on batteries
    • Elon Musk interview
      Tesla’s Model Y, on sale since March, is a showcase of EV technologies competitors will benchmark.
      Technologies of Electrification
      Cadillac’s Lyriq EV will be unveiled Aug. 6.
      Future Product Pipeline
      A CALL TO ACTION
    • Lack of microchips, seat foam and more halts production
      Ford: No going back to the old way of work
      GM weighs stocking its EVs at regional lots
      Scrutiny of Sonic could fade with Smith case
    • Access F&I
    • Fixed Ops Journal
    • Marketing
    • Used Cars
    • Retail Technology
    • Sales
    • Best Practices
    • Dealership Buy/Sell
    • NADA
    • NADA Show
    • Automakers
    • Manufacturing
    • Suppliers
    • Regulations & Safety
    • Executives
    • Talk From The Top
    • Leading Women Network
    • Guide to Economic Development
    • PACE Awards
    • Management Briefing Seminars
    • World Congress
    • Aston Martin
    • BMW
      • Mini
      • Rolls-Royce
    • Daimler
      • Mercedes Benz
      • Smart
    • Ford
      • Lincoln
    • General Motors
      • Buick
      • Cadillac
      • Chevrolet
      • GMC
    • Honda
      • Acura
    • Hyundai
      • Genesis
      • Kia
    • Mazda
    • McLaren
    • Mitsubishi
    • Nissan
      • Infiniti
    • Stellantis
      • Alfa Romeo
      • Citroen
      • Chrysler
      • Dodge
      • Ferrari
      • Fiat
      • Jeep
      • Lancia
      • Maserati
      • Opel
      • Peugeot
      • Ram
      • Vauxhall
    • Renault
    • Subaru
    • Suzuki
    • Tata
      • Jaguar
      • Land Rover
    • Tesla
    • Toyota
      • Lexus
    • Volkswagen
      • Audi
      • Bentley
      • Bugatti
      • Lamborghini
      • Porsche
      • Seat
      • Skoda
    • Volvo
    • (Discontinued Brands)
    • Virtual reveals (Sponsored)
      • MITSUBISHI: 2022 Outlander
      • NISSAN: 2022 Pathfinder and 2022 Frontier
      • GENESIS: 2021 GV80
      • KIA: 2021 K5
      • LEXUS: 2021 IS
      • NISSAN: 2021 Rogue
      • TOYOTA: 2021 Venza and 2021 Sienna
    • Auto Shows
    • Future Product Pipeline
    • Photo Galleries
    • Car Cutaways
    • Design
  • OPINION
    • Blogs
    • Cartoons
    • Keith Crain
    • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
    • Columnists
    • China Commentary
    • Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Send us a Letter
    • Fisker gets a rare second chance to build his own car company
      The new Stellantis pickup: Schrödinger's Dakota
      Gerry McGovern is right man to steer Jaguar reinvention
      Forget the Ford GT; Moray Callum's biggest hit is the aluminum F-150
    • Tesla's 'Technoking'
      Tesla's 'Technoking'
      Avoiding shortages
      How to Avoid Shortages
      Record Dealer Profit - Leo Michael
      Record Dealer Profits
      Jaguar is about to undergo its fourth reinvention in five decades as owner Tata Group takes a second crack at shaking up a brand whose glorious past has rarely translated into a profitable present or sustainable future.
      Jaguar Redo, Part IV
    • Shifting gears away from the stick shift
      SEMA still a wonderful circus
      Penske still has plenty of races to win
      Ford's turn in the hot seat
    • March 16, 2021 | Industry offers warning to Apple
      March 9, 2021 | An electric storm is moving in
      March 2, 2021 | Will EV bets pay off?
      February 23, 2021 | Reliability continues to soar
    • Michelle Hill
      For women in auto industry, there's strength in numbers
      Dave Versical
      A new era for 5th-gen Fords
      Ben Bartosch
      For dealers, CPO vehicles deliver value amid pandemic
      Travis Peterson
      One-size-fits-all DMS not always best
    • VW Group's playbook to dominate EV market
      Geely HQ
      Why Geely wants to be a contract manufacturer
      Shanghai hints at how Chinese cities will pursue electrification
      How Tesla, GM transformed EV market in 2020
    • Electric vehicle hype opens door to short sellers
      Address vaccine doubts at work to lead U.S. back
      Sergio Marchionne Dennis Williams hug
      Prosecutors show an unsettling path to save Chrysler
      U.S. Dealership lot
      Lean lots won't last without new dealer discipline
    • Used-vehicle retailers have got it all wrong
      Dealers, be aware of possible tax relief
      Multifuel stations way forward for EVs
      New look at Nissan a positive sign
  • DATA CENTER
  • VIDEO
    • AutoNews Now
    • First Shift
    • Special Video Reports
    • Weekend Drive
    • Tom Worobec
      AutoNews Now: Teslas banned from China's military property
      AutoNews Now: GM shuffling some salaried workers to boost collaboration
      AutoNews Now: Ford's flexible work-from-home option
      AutoNews Now: UAW blasts Ford for potential product move to Mexico
    • First Shift: Stellantis to build, hold Ram pickups due to chip shortage
      First Shift: Ford to build, hold F-150s without modules due to chip shortage
      First Shift: Honda adds Mexico plant to U.S., Canada closures
      First Shift: Honda, Toyota cut N.A. output due to supply issues
    • One man’s journey from homelessness to thriving dealer
      Bert Ogden Auto Group
      How a Texas group is cutting costs, saving millions
      COVID, chips and checks: Sales headwinds and tailwinds for 2021
      N.J. dealer helps position peers for ‘electric revolution’
    • Why the pickup is the auto industry's 'battleground'
      Carlos Ghosn's quest to restore his reputation
      Why Ford must execute to avoid 'deep trouble'
      Why Honda is 'locked and loaded' for 2020
  • EVENTS & AWARDS
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Congress Conversations
    • Retail Forum: NADA
    • Canada Congress
    • Europe Congress Conversations
    • Leading Women Conference
    • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
    • ANE Shift
    • Shift: Mobility at a Crossroads
    • Shift: The Future of Mobility (CES)
    • 100 Leading Women
    • 40 Under 40 Retail
    • All-Stars
    • Best Dealerships To Work For
      • Register for the 2021 Best Dealership To Work For
    • PACE Program
    • Rising Stars
    • Europe Rising Stars
  • JOBS
  • AN Solutions
  • +MORE
    • Leading Women Network
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars
    • In the Driver's Seat
    • Publishing Partners
    • Classifieds
    • Companies on the Move
    • People on the Move
    • Newsletters
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • RSS Feeds
    • Shift: A Podcast About Mobility
    • Special Reports Podcasts
    • Daily Drive Podcasts
    • AAM
    • Cars.com
    • DealerPolicy
    • Gentex
    • IHS Markit
    • Remember Group
    • Reputation.com
    • Ricardo: Dave Shemmans
    • Ricardo: Marques McCammon
    • Allstate: Want more from your F&I?
    • Ally: Navigating the future of automotive retailing
    • Amazon Web Services: Any place, any time, any channel
    • Amazon Web Services: The power of the cloud
    • Amazon Web Services: Universal translator: Harnessing sensor data to build better automotive software
    • DealerSocket: 5 steps to modernizing the buyer's journey
    • Epic Games: Transforming the auto industry with digital assets
    • Epic Games: Unreal build: Automotive 2021 gets a digital twist
    • FTI Consulting: Crisis as a catalyst for change
    • Google: 5 trends shaping the auto industry's approach to a new normal
    • Google: Google's dealer guidebook helps dealers navigate today's digital landscape
    • IHS Markit: Automotive loyalty in the wake of the COVID-19 recession
    • IHS Markit: Autonomous vehicles: Automotive and transportation disruption
    • IHS Markit: COVID-19: The future mobility delusion
    • Level5: 2020 Automotive E-Commerce Report
    • Motormindz: Toward hyperconnectivity: 5 ways to position your business to profit from connected car
    • Naked Lime: Bring social reputation together as part of big-picture marketing
    • Wells Fargo Auto: Switching gears from LIBOR to SOFR
    • Ally: Do It Right
    • DealerSocket
    • Deloitte: Cyber everywhere: Preparing for automotive safety in the face of cyber threats
    • Facebook: The road to a zero-friction future
    • Guide To Economic Development
    • PayPal Credit: How consumer financing helps drive sales for online auto parts retailers
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. Manufacturing
March 22, 2021 11:20 AM

Idle plants could help Detroit 3 win the e-truck war, report says

Ford, GM and Stellantis are in position to ramp up output faster than rivals

KYLE STOCK
Bloomberg
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Print
    Idle Detroit factory
    BLOOMBERG

    An idled plant in Detroit.

    In the nascent truck wars, Detroit won’t need tents.

    In the summer of 2018, when Tesla needed to quickly ramp up production at its Fremont, Calif., factory, the company erected a big top the size of two football fields in the parking lot. The strategy brought into stark relief the difficulty of taking a vehicle from the drawing board to the end of an assembly line.

    The future of the auto industry in America will be largely determined by a parade of new electric trucks — at least four from Detroit incumbents facing off against at least six from Tesla Inc. and other upstarts. The newcomers will be building pickups for the first time, but they also will be building truck factories for the first time, which is arguably a more difficult task. Not only have Ford Motor Co., General Motors, and Stellantis NV refined the blocking and tackling of building and tooling a factory, they have scads of them sitting empty or ticking away at reduced capacity.

    “A distinct advantage of the incumbent automakers is their installed capacity and their ability to pivot that to building something new,” said Gartner Inc. analyst Michael Ramsay. “It’s not only an advantage, it might be the advantage.”

    In January, production at North American plants operated by Detroit’s so-called Big Three was down 21 percent from levels three years ago; collectively, Ford, GM, and Stellantis — the latter was formed from the merger of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV and PSA Group — cranked out 150,000 fewer vehicles in the month than they had in January 2018, according to data from Bloomberg Intelligence. Some of that decline is a sober reaction to a slower economy. However, much of the production is indefinitely idled, the result of executives ruthlessly culling sedans and other slow-selling models from their product lines.

    One in 6 of the vehicles these companies made in early 2018 has been discontinued. Everything that wasn’t battery-powered, a truck, or an SUV (or all three) got a long, hard look from the C-suites in Detroit. What resulted was a parade of models that have rolled into the sunset, namely vanilla sedans such as the Ford Fusion and cramped compacts like the Chevrolet Cruze. If they weren’t killed off, they were shipped abroad (much of Buick production, for example, is in China because that’s the biggest market for the brand). 

    The house cleaning puts the auto industry’s old-guard in the unique position to spool up production quickly as it launches new electric models, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Kevin Tynan. “It is an oversight to discount the legacy automakers that already have design, engineering, production, distribution, and after-sales scale already in place,” Tynan said. The new variables are the electric motor and the machinery linking an EV to the wheels — technology, Tynan said, that isn’t “knowable only to tiny, nascent metal-benders that want to be labeled as software companies.”

    The software and battery chemistry of a contemporary EV does mandate a learning curve, but so too does the building and refining of a manufacturing site, which many of startups will be doing for the first time. The fortunes of many auto startups are now riding on slick production vehicles, often built by hand in a garage. Rolling a vehicle off a line every few minutes is an industrial ballet, where everything is carefully choreographed, from how often lug nut trays are refilled to where autonomous delivery sleds scoot by.

    As Bloomberg recently reported, Rivian Automotive Inc., the electric-truck startup backed by Amazon.com Inc., is building annual capacity for about 300,000 vehicles and aims to make as many as 40,000 in its first full year — almost 800 trucks a week. While Amazon and Ford are providing financing and operational advice, “output of that magnitude across three different models is a tall order for an untested business.”

    Even switching a factory from making one vehicle to another is an expensive process that typically takes months. The robots have to be recalibrated, the lift heights recalculated, and the entire supply system needs to be retooled for deliveries. “It’s not as easy as it sounds,” Ramsay said, “even though it doesn’t sound easy.”

    With their expected e-truck rollouts, the Detroit companies could ramp up to make four times as many pickups annually from those inactive factories.

    At stake is the future of these companies. Pickups represent a $140 billion market annually in the U.S. — that’s 1 in 4 of the industry’s revenue dollars for 1 in 5 of every vehicle sold. When electric half-tons hit the market, the segment will likely swell. Detroit has long excelled at defending its truck turf from foreign rivals, at least those powered by gasoline. In 2019, Ford, General Motors, and Fiat-Chrysler collectively controlled 94 percent of the full-size pickup market, their highest share in 16 years.  

    Towing the Market
    Ford already has overhauled its Rouge complex in Dearborn, Mich., to start stamping out electric F-150s, part of a $700 million project. However, the company has plenty of extra capacity elsewhere before the first electric trucks hit the market in 2022. A plant in Flat Rock, Mich., for example, stopped making the Continental in December; Ford has promised the autoworkers union that it will look for something to replace it. Starting in 2025, the company has said it will build five electric models at its Oakville, Ontario, plant, which currently produces the Edge SUV, and it’s pledged to ramp up its Ohio assembly plant, where production has dropped by more than a third in three years.

    Meanwhile, GM has cleared the decks at its Detroit plant and is spending $3 billion, in part to retrofit the so-called Hamtramck space for electric trucks and SUVs. The almost 40-year-old facility, recently scheduled to close, will be making the all-new GMC Hummer by the end of the year. Like its crosstown rival, GM has many assembly line options. Its Chevrolet Malibu, one of two vehicles built in its massive Kansas City, Kan. factory, won’t be renewed beyond 2022. Both the paint shop and stamping machinery at the facility (two of the most expensive parts of a plant) are less than a decade old. 

    Stellantis has been less aggressive in pursuing an electric pickup, though it’s promised one and has plenty of idled manufacturing power. The company recently said it will spend $1.1 billion to retool its Windsor, Ontario, plant for as-yet unnamed electric vehicles. Dedicated to minivans, production levels in Windsor are down 50 percent from three years ago.

    Switching a factory is no simple task, nor is it cheap. Generally, it takes months and hundreds of millions of dollars for an automaker to retool a facility; almost everything is removed save the shell of the building itself. Still, some of the most expensive components transfer to a new architecture without much effort, namely the paint shop, massive metal stamping machines, and assembly robots.

    The network of suppliers is also valuable infrastructure, a web of third-party companies nearby that can deliver parts, including seats and bumpers, every few hours. However, Ramsay at Gartner said the eventual map of EV manufacturing may largely be shaped by where the batteries are made. “They are going to go where they get cheap electricity,” he said. “And nobody is going to want to ship 3,000-pound batteries around the country.”

    RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
    The latest numbers on the microchip shortage
    Letter
    to the
    Editor

     

     

    Send us a letter

    Have an opinion about this story? Click here to submit a Letter to the Editor, and we may publish it in print.

    Recommended for You
    Lack of microchips, seat foam and more halts production
    Lack of microchips, seat foam and more halts production
    The latest numbers on the microchip shortage
    The latest numbers on the microchip shortage
    GM keeps on trucking, even with missing parts
    GM keeps on trucking, even with missing parts
    Google's dealer guidebook helps dealers navigate today's digital landscape
    Sponsored Content: Google's dealer guidebook helps dealers navigate today's digital landscape
    Sign up for free newsletters
    EMAIL ADDRESS

    Please enter a valid email address.

    Please enter your email address.

    Please verify captcha.

    Please select at least one newsletter to subscribe.

    See more newsletter options at autonews.com/newsletters.

    You can unsubscribe at any time through links in these emails. For more information, see our Privacy Policy.

    Digital Edition
    Automotive News 3-22-21
    THIS WEEK'S EDITION
    See our archive
    Fixed Ops Journal
    Fixed Ops Journal 2-8-21
    Read the issue
    See our archive
    BREAKING NEWS ALERTS: Sign up and be the first to know when big news breaks.
    AUTOMOTIVE NEWS TV WITH TOM WOROBEC: Sign up for our afternoon newscast and catch up on the top news of the day with our brief video roundup.
    Get Free Newsletters

    Sign up and get the best of Automotive News delivered straight to your email inbox, free of charge. Choose your news – we will deliver.

    Subscribe Today

    Get 24/7 access to in-depth, authoritative coverage of the auto industry from a global team of reporters and editors covering the news that’s vital to your business.

    Subscribe Now
    Connect With Us
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter

    Our mission

    The Automotive News mission is to be the primary source of industry news, data and understanding for the industry's decision-makers interested in North America.

    AN-LOGO-BLUE
    Contact Us

    1155 Gratiot Avenue
    Detroit, Michigan
    48207-2997

    (877) 812-1584

    Email us

    Automotive News
    ISSN 0005-1551 (print)
    ISSN 1557-7686 (online)

    Fixed Ops Journal
    ISSN 2576-1064 (print)
    ISSN 2576-1072 (online)

    Resources
    • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe
    • Manage your account
    • Reprints
    • Ad Choices Ad Choices
    • Sitemap
    Legal
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Privacy Request
    Automotive News
    Copyright © 1996-2021. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • HOME
    • NEWS
      • Dealers
        • Access F&I
        • Fixed Ops Journal
        • Marketing
        • Used Cars
        • Retail Technology
        • Sales
        • Best Practices
        • Dealership Buy/Sell
        • NADA
        • NADA Show
      • Automakers & Suppliers
        • Automakers
        • Manufacturing
        • Suppliers
        • Regulations & Safety
        • Executives
        • Talk From The Top
        • Leading Women Network
        • Guide to Economic Development
        • PACE Awards
        • Management Briefing Seminars
        • World Congress
      • News by Brand
        • Aston Martin
        • BMW
          • Mini
          • Rolls-Royce
        • Daimler
          • Mercedes Benz
          • Smart
        • Ford
          • Lincoln
        • General Motors
          • Buick
          • Cadillac
          • Chevrolet
          • GMC
        • Honda
          • Acura
        • Hyundai
          • Genesis
          • Kia
        • Mazda
        • McLaren
        • Mitsubishi
        • Nissan
          • Infiniti
        • Stellantis
          • Alfa Romeo
          • Citroen
          • Chrysler
          • Dodge
          • Ferrari
          • Fiat
          • Jeep
          • Lancia
          • Maserati
          • Opel
          • Peugeot
          • Ram
          • Vauxhall
        • Renault
        • Subaru
        • Suzuki
        • Tata
          • Jaguar
          • Land Rover
        • Tesla
        • Toyota
          • Lexus
        • Volkswagen
          • Audi
          • Bentley
          • Bugatti
          • Lamborghini
          • Porsche
          • Seat
          • Skoda
        • Volvo
        • (Discontinued Brands)
      • Cars & Concepts
        • Virtual reveals (Sponsored)
          • MITSUBISHI: 2022 Outlander
          • NISSAN: 2022 Pathfinder and 2022 Frontier
          • GENESIS: 2021 GV80
          • KIA: 2021 K5
          • LEXUS: 2021 IS
          • NISSAN: 2021 Rogue
          • TOYOTA: 2021 Venza and 2021 Sienna
        • Auto Shows
        • Future Product Pipeline
        • Photo Galleries
        • Car Cutaways
        • Design
      • Coronavirus Coverage
      • China
      • Shift
      • Mobility Report
      • Special Reports
      • Digital Edition Archive
      • This Week's Issue
    • OPINION
      • Blogs
      • Cartoons
      • Keith Crain
      • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
      • Columnists
      • China Commentary
      • Editorials
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Send us a Letter
    • DATA CENTER
    • VIDEO
      • AutoNews Now
      • First Shift
      • Special Video Reports
      • Weekend Drive
    • EVENTS & AWARDS
      • Events
        • Congress Conversations
        • Retail Forum: NADA
        • Canada Congress
        • Europe Congress Conversations
        • Leading Women Conference
        • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
        • ANE Shift
        • Shift: Mobility at a Crossroads
        • Shift: The Future of Mobility (CES)
      • Awards
        • 100 Leading Women
        • 40 Under 40 Retail
        • All-Stars
        • Best Dealerships To Work For
          • Register for the 2021 Best Dealership To Work For
        • PACE Program
        • Rising Stars
        • Europe Rising Stars
    • JOBS
    • AN Solutions
    • +MORE
      • Leading Women Network
      • Podcasts
        • Shift: A Podcast About Mobility
        • Special Reports Podcasts
        • Daily Drive Podcasts
      • Webinars
      • In the Driver's Seat
        • AAM
        • Cars.com
        • DealerPolicy
        • Gentex
        • IHS Markit
        • Remember Group
        • Reputation.com
        • Ricardo: Dave Shemmans
        • Ricardo: Marques McCammon
      • Publishing Partners
        • Allstate: Want more from your F&I?
        • Ally: Navigating the future of automotive retailing
        • Amazon Web Services: Any place, any time, any channel
        • Amazon Web Services: The power of the cloud
        • Amazon Web Services: Universal translator: Harnessing sensor data to build better automotive software
        • DealerSocket: 5 steps to modernizing the buyer's journey
        • Epic Games: Transforming the auto industry with digital assets
        • Epic Games: Unreal build: Automotive 2021 gets a digital twist
        • FTI Consulting: Crisis as a catalyst for change
        • Google: 5 trends shaping the auto industry's approach to a new normal
        • Google: Google's dealer guidebook helps dealers navigate today's digital landscape
        • IHS Markit: Automotive loyalty in the wake of the COVID-19 recession
        • IHS Markit: Autonomous vehicles: Automotive and transportation disruption
        • IHS Markit: COVID-19: The future mobility delusion
        • Level5: 2020 Automotive E-Commerce Report
        • Motormindz: Toward hyperconnectivity: 5 ways to position your business to profit from connected car
        • Naked Lime: Bring social reputation together as part of big-picture marketing
        • Wells Fargo Auto: Switching gears from LIBOR to SOFR
        • Ally: Do It Right
        • DealerSocket
        • Deloitte: Cyber everywhere: Preparing for automotive safety in the face of cyber threats
        • Facebook: The road to a zero-friction future
        • Guide To Economic Development
        • PayPal Credit: How consumer financing helps drive sales for online auto parts retailers
      • Classifieds
      • Companies on the Move
      • People on the Move
      • Newsletters
      • Contact Us
      • Media Kit
      • RSS Feeds