Ford to Offer All-Electric Full-Size Transit Van

SID297

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  • The world’s best-selling cargo van – Ford Transit – will debut an all-electric version for the U.S. and Canada for the 2022 model year, helping businesses achieve sustainability goals and lower cost of ownership while helping cities improve air quality and reduce noise levels
  • Built in the U.S., the all-electric Transit will be smart and connected, arming fleet owners with technology solutions like in-vehicle high-speed data architecture and cloud-based services to offer new ways to optimize fleet performance
  • All-electric Transit will be built on the backbone of Ford’s 35 years of commercial vehicle leadership, its strong manufacturing base, parts availability and service network, as well as a highly integrated upfitter network; it will come with access to the largest public charging network in North America
  • The right tool for the job, all-electric Transit will provide customers the power of choice with a variety of configurations including cargo van, cutaway, chassis cab, three roof heights and three body lengths
DEARBORN, Mich., March 3, 2020 – The best-selling cargo van in the world – Ford Transit – is going digital, with an all-electric version coming for the 2022 model year.

“Commercial vehicles are a critical component to our big bet on electrification,” said Jim Farley, chief operating officer, Ford Motor Company. “As leaders in this space, we are accelerating our plans to create solutions that help businesses run better, starting with our all-electric Transit and F-150. This Ford Transit isn’t just about creating an electric drivetrain, it’s about designing and developing a digital product that propels fleets forward.”

With the world’s best-selling cargo van and as America’s best-selling commercial van brand for 41 years, Ford intends to lead the transition to zero emissions in the segment with its all-electric Transit. Ford’s U.S. truck and van fleet sales have grown 33 percent since 2015 and the company expects continued growth of van sales in the U.S. as e-commerce and “last mile” delivery increase. Ford’s overall van sales delivered their best fourth quarter results since 1978 on sales of 59,930 vans. For the year, Ford van sales totaled 240,529 vehicles. Ford expects electric vehicles to grow to 8 percent of the industry in 2025 in the U.S.

As consumers focus on reducing their own carbon footprints, more and more businesses are setting ambitious sustainability goals. Cities, meanwhile, are weighing increasingly stringent rules to address CO2, air quality and noise reduction goals.

The all-electric Transit, which will be American-built*, is part of Ford’s more than $11.5 billion investment in electrification through 2022. This vision includes all-electric vehicles that build on Ford’s strengths and taps the company’s all-electric technology to deliver even more performance, capability and productivity – including the all-electric Transit sold in Europe, Mustang Mach-E coming later this year and the previously announced all-electric F-150.

Smart and connected
“The world is heading toward electrified products and fleet customers are asking for them now,” said Farley. “We know their vehicles operate as a connected mobile business and their technology needs are different than retail customers. So Ford is thinking deeply on connectivity relationships that integrate with our in-vehicle high-speed electrical architectures and cloud-based data services to provide these businesses smart vehicles beyond just the electric powertrains.”

Smart technology built in to the all-electric Transit helps to optimize fleet efficiency and reduce waste, as well as improve driver behavior by providing insights into operator performance. Fleets can leverage insightful data collected through Ford Telematics™ using an embedded FordPass Connect™ modem featuring a 4G LTE Wi-Fi hotspot with connectivity for up to 10 devices. Managers can use Ford Data Services™ tools like live map GPS tracking, geofencing and vehicle diagnostics to see at-a-glance key performance indicators at a glance for vehicle and driver.

A suite of Ford driver-assist technologies can help improve driver confidence and avoid or reduce the severity of a collision**. The vehicle includes standard Pre-Collision Assist with Automatic Emergency Braking plus Pedestrian Detection, Forward Collision Warning, Post-Collision Braking, Lane-Keeping System and auto high-beam headlamps.

Total package delivery machine
With 35 years of commercial vehicle leadership, Ford knows customers need the right tool to get the job done. The all-electric Ford Transit will offer uncompromised cargo capacity and the power of choice with a variety of chassis options, including cargo van, cutaway and chassis cab, plus three roof heights and three body lengths. Customers will have the full backing of the company’s massive electric vehicle-certified dealer network, more than 730 commercial vehicle centers across the U.S. and Canada, and access to Ford’s charging network – North America’s largest public charging network***.

Fleet operators can expect advantages beyond just eliminating trips to the gas station. All-electric powertrains mean significantly less scheduled maintenance than internal combustion engines, plus lower operating costs. Electric vehicle fleets may benefit from federal, state and local electric vehicle tax incentives, access to high-occupancy vehicle lanes and free parking. Electric vehicles can operate where vans with internal combustion engines cannot, including indoors, in environments with limited ventilation, and at night in areas with restrictive noise ordinances.

Further details about the all-electric Ford Transit and its features will be revealed later.
 

Weather Man

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Be interesting to see if the operating costs being lower bears out.
 

72MachOne99GT

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I see this vehicle being purchased/leased in mass number by Amazon.

I’ve read this three times now, and every single time I’ve read “used in mass murder” Now I can’t unsee it.

I see these being much more useful in large cities where hundreds of deliveries can take place in a short range. Moving to suburbs and rural locations seems less likely, especially considering most EV ranges aren’t quite up to where some of us need them to be to be practical.
 

Russo

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we have a transit and the ecoboost is great for towing and the real world gas mileage is acceptable.. however a EV with a range of anything less than 350-400 miles will make it impossible to trust for my business.. a hybrid? yes..
 

CompOrange04GT

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They are using individuals for that now too. So anyone can apply to be a delivery person and get your own fleet. One of those today I learned things.


One of my friends dads was talking about doing this in Phoenix..

then said it would take over 25 drivers on your fleet to even make it worth the stress financially
 

Stanley

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One of my friends dads was talking about doing this in Phoenix..

then said it would take over 25 drivers on your fleet to even make it worth the stress financially
It says on the info page that it isn't a passive income thing. I don't like most people, so it didn't seem like a good fit for me. I like that Amazon is giving people the opportunity to become business owners in that capacity.
 

CompOrange04GT

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It says on the info page that it isn't a passive income thing. I don't like most people, so it didn't seem like a good fit for me. I like that Amazon is giving people the opportunity to become business owners in that capacity.

while I was out there the highways were flooded with the vans

makes me wonder how many they will need til the market gets saturated..

I checked job boards to see how much they pay the drivers. Between $15-19 an hour was the average.

the road rage is probably VERY real out there after 8-10 hours a day on those roads
 

RedVenom48

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while I was out there the highways were flooded with the vans

makes me wonder how many they will need til the market gets saturated..

I checked job boards to see how much they pay the drivers. Between $15-19 an hour was the average.

the road rage is probably VERY real out there after 8-10 hours a day on those roads
Love AZ, and the actual road infrastructure is pretty good. But the actual drivers themselves? Utter shit. Absolute shit.


As for the EV, I think it's a great idea for delivery companies with SET routes. Easy to plan the power consumption and you aren't likely to be stranded with a dead battery off route.

As a daily driver or family vehicle? No thanks.
 

coposrv

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Being heavily service based it’s difficult to predict my mileage day to day.


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IronSnake

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Inner-city, smaller suburbs, dedicated routes, etc. Sure, makes a great deal of sense.

But I see a lot of dead EV van's in the future with generators/portable power stations charging those bad boys up.
 

AustinSN

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Inner-city, smaller suburbs, dedicated routes, etc. Sure, makes a great deal of sense.

But I see a lot of dead EV van's in the future with generators/portable power stations charging those bad boys up.
I can't imagine it would be any more than you would see now.

For the early adopters, companies will probably require guys to find a super charger mid day when they go to have their lunch.
 

bdcardinal

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Hopefully this doesn't crash and burn like the electric Transit Connects. Those had proprietary drive systems from Azure Dynamics who went belly up along with all the production of all the components. They are all giant paper weights now.
 

Stanley

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I didn't think about it until I saw them yesterday, but our field IT guys use Transits now and switching to electric would make a lot of sense for us. They cover three plants in this area that are pretty close together and the EPA would love a chemical plant switching to EV's.
 

SID297

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I didn't think about it until I saw them yesterday, but our field IT guys use Transits now and switching to electric would make a lot of sense for us. They cover three plants in this area that are pretty close together and the EPA would love a chemical plant switching to EV's.

IMO, it's going to take some serious incentives/subsidies to get most companies to make the switch.
 

Stanley

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IMO, it's going to take some serious incentives/subsidies to get most companies to make the switch.
In this industry doing things like that gives the company something to show the community and EPA that they are trying to be environmentally friendly. Help people forget about the times the flare lights off.
 

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