Ford Ranger-sized EV ute must prove itself in US before global rollout


Ford will introduce a new Ford Ranger-sized electric ute in the United States (US) in 2027, but the automaker says it must sell well enough there before it looks at exports – meaning it may not come to Australia.

The US car giant previously confirmed its new Universal Electric Vehicle (UEV) platform will underpin a new mid-sized ute made in the US state of Kentucky.

The ute would be priced in the US, at least, around the same US$30,000 (A$45,000) kick-off as the Ford Escape SUV, a rival to the Toyota RAV4 and Mazda CX-5 since dropped by Ford in both Australia and the US.

It would face the new-generation Toyota HiLux EV scheduled to go on sale in Australia in early 2026, although pricing has yet to be announced, as well as the upcoming Isuzu D-Max EV and current LDV eT60 electric utes.

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The UEV platform was announced after Ford suffered billions of dollars in losses on EVs, leading to the recent cancellation of its Ford F-150 Lightning EV, which it heralded in 2022 as significant as the 1908 Model T.

Automakers typically produce global platforms to spread cost between regions, something Ford has done successfully for decades, sharing parts while reducing overall spending on development and manufacturing.

Ford’s planned UEV platform is modular, meaning it could also be used to manufacture smaller EVs for Europe, for example, but Automotive News Europe reports the automaker is yet to commit to exporting UEV models.

“The competitive threat that we are seeing with the Chinese in Europe is significant,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said on a media call earlier this month.