Hope for BlueOval City remains high amid waning EV demand
Setbacks, waning consumer demand and weakening government support have created uncertainty about the future of the electric vehicle industry, but the West Tennessee communities near BlueOval City remain hopeful.
Ford’s $5.6 billion, 3,600-acre mega campus covers nearly six square miles in rural Haywood County, less than an hour northeast of Memphis.
The automaker planned to start assembling its electric truck in 2025, but announced in August that it was delaying production until the second half of 2027.
Stanton, a town in Haywood County with 500 residents, is the nearest community to BlueOval City. Despite Ford’s delays, Stanton Mayor Allan Sterbinsky said his town remains enthusiastic about the project.
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Ford Motor Co. BlueOval City automakers BlueOval SK Stanton TN Allan Sterbinsky Subscriber OnlyThank you for supporting local journalism.
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Aisling Mäki
Aisling Mäki has spent the better part of two decades writing about Memphis. A former digital journalist for WMC Action News 5 and staff reporter for Memphis Daily News, her work has also appeared in The Commercial Appeal, High Ground News, I Love Memphis, Inside Memphis Business, The Memphis Flyer, Memphis Parent, Memphis Magazine and Tri-State Defender.
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