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Is Australia ready for the electrified ute?

Ford’s EV pick-up marks a turning point in electric acceptance, but when will Australia join in?

Australia electrified ute future feature
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This story was first published in December 2021

The best-selling vehicle in America, the Ford F-Series, is now available as an EV – and our Stateside friends are absolutely lapping it up.

But, as we’ll get to in a moment, Australia’s car companies aren’t even talking about electric utes yet, and likely won’t be for some time.

In the USA, in just one week, more than 70,000 orders were placed for the Ford F-150 Lightning, a vehicle at polar opposites to the gas-guzzling stereotype we might associate with this segment. For context, consider that Ford sold 203,797 F-Series trucks for the first three months of 2021, so Lightning needed only seven days to account for over one third of F-Series’ quarterly sales.

It’s a significant shift for the EV segment in the USA, which, up until Ford’s entry, has been dominated by Tesla, with the Chevrolet Bolt and Nissan’s Leaf picking up the scraps.

Ford F 150 Lightning Pro Front 1
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So what’s got America’s vast middle class so ready to embrace the Lightning?

For starters, affordability. The less-luxo version, called Pro, is priced just under US$40,000 (AU$53,915) before government incentives, which is a mere US$3300 (AU$4448) more than the equivalent entry-level, petrol-powered F-150. Yet the Pro features electric motors on each axle to develop 318kW and 1051Nm, and can travel up to a claimed 370km on a charge.

Opting for the larger Extended Range battery ups the price to US$49,974 (AU$64,200), but bumps outputs to 420kW and 1051Nm, cuts the 0-100km/h sprint time to under five seconds, and increases claimed driving range to 483km.

Ford F 150 Lightning Pro Towing
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So could Aussie buyers follow America’s lead and embrace EV utes? Well, Lightning won’t be the vehicle to do it, as it’s not built in right-hand drive. But utes do make up around 20 per cent of Australia’s new-car market, so surely the potential exists.

Ask Ford, though, and the simple answer is: not for some time. Global CEO of the Blue Oval Jim Farley says since dual-cabs are so popular here, as are diesels, and Australia’s charging infrastructure is not mature – it’s hard to make a case for EVs.

“Infrastructure would have to improve in places like South Africa and Australia,” he told The Verge’s Decoder podcast. “I think it will take some time for those markets to move to full-electric.”

Archive Whichcar 2020 05 22 Misc 2021 Ranger Wheels
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Above: what we believe to be the new Ranger
The Ford F-150 Lightning needed only seven days to account for over one third of F-Series’ quarterly sales.

Meanwhile, Ford Australia Product Communications Manager Ben Nightingale tells Wheels EV utes are coming, but they are years away.

“Globally, Ford is investing almost AU$39 billion in electrified vehicles through to 2025,” he says. “Electric vehicles are a big part of our future,” but the brand is “taking a considered approach to electrification” and will reveal more electrified model news “in due course.”

Wheels understands, though it’s unconfirmed, that even though the next Ranger will be engineered to be PHEV capable, Australia won’t have access to it as a hybrid from the get-go.

News 2022 Ford Ranger Spied Nsw
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As for the other big Aussie players in the dual-cab segment, Toyota is revealing nothing about its HiLux plans, choosing not to comment when approached by Wheels.

Volkswagen, for which the Amarok ute is its second-best-selling model behind Golf, also told us there isn’t anything to discuss at this stage.

Will the success of the F-150 Lighting provide momentum for other brands to fast-track EV pick-up development? The benefits are obvious, from packaging (no engine allows for a huge lockable storage frunk in addition to the tray) to performance, with the Lighting confirmed to be quicker than the third-gen US-market Raptor.

Oh, and yes, electric vehicles can tow. Depending on the variant, Ford claims a maximum braked towing figure of 4536kg for the Lightning, and a maximum payload of 907kg.

But for now, it seems boutique upstarts like Bollinger and Rivian may deliver EV pick-ups in Oz before many of the major OEMs.

Will Ford make a PHEV Ranger ute?

News 2022 RANGER RAPTOR 4 X 4
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For 4x4 ute buyers with no inclination to switch to electric, the new 2022 Ford Ranger hears you loud and clear. By the end of the year, Ford Australia will confirm details of the next-gen dual-cab, which Wheels readers will have already seen via our exclusively leaked photographs.

But while we do know the next Ranger will be plug-in capable, Australia won’t likely see a piece of that action at launch.

Instead, with the five-cylinder diesel gone, a turbo-diesel V6 seems likely (probably a variant of the 3.0-litre Powerstroke unit offered in the F-150), as well as an updated version of the current 2.0-litre twin-turbo diesel.

For the Ranger Raptor, there’s tipped to be a twin-turbo petrol V6, though we’re not expecting to see this until at least 2023.

The 2022 Ranger will be built on an evolution of the current T6 platform, with key alterations to allow for hybridisation and electrification, possibly with dimensional changes and revised rear suspension to improve traction and ride.

Chris Thompson
Contributor

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