Ford Revises Dealer EV Requirements

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

In what could be a tacit admission the transition to electric vehicles is going approximately as smoothly as a Michigan secondary road, it is being reported that suits at the Blue Oval are rolling back some of the requirements demanded of dealers in order to shill EVs to customers.


According to those in the know at Automotive News, Ford is slashing the required dealer training on electron eaters in half, while also cutting the number of EV chargers a retailer must install. As an example, storefronts popping for the so-called Certified Elite badge of honor now need only install a trio of Level 2 chargers instead of the previous suggestion of five. As well, the requirement of building a burly Level 3 DC fast charger sometime before 2026 has been removed from the agreement altogether. 


Meanwhile, dealers fronting for mere Certified (sans Elite) status are on the hook for just two Level 2 chargers, again down from the previous watermark of five. Deadlines for the work to be completed in either case has been pushed back to the end of next June. Supply chain and infrastructure problems are being blamed for the changes.


Of course, our readers in the B&B know the difference. These alterations smack to high heaven of dealer pushback, showing up in the form of loud declarations from Dealer Principals to Area Managers about cost, timing, and color of the showroom tiles. In fact, over two dozen dealers in the state of Illinois successfully pursued a legal case in which they argued the old program violated state franchise laws. As anyone with half a brain would expect, many complaints were lodged about the cost of Level 3 chargers, most of which can recharge an EV in jig time but can hoover up a six-figure invoice without blinking. Dealers apparently argued that slow Level 2 chargers were more than sufficient to keep new EVs full of juice for test drives. 


It is worth noting that Level 2s are widely available from a host of different providers – both for commercial and residential installations – and are popping up quicker than kudzu in Kansas. Alert readers will also question how much language is in these agreements requiring dealers keep the chargers in good working order after installing them. If that caveat is not present, there’s every chance in the world those chargers - placed by unwilling dealers who also surely complain about giving away free electricity – will be deader than disco in no time.


[Images: Ford]


Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by   subscribing to our newsletter.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

Comments
Join the conversation
5 of 22 comments
  • Jbltg I keep cars for a long time and have done this replacement on two vehicles, so far. Completely worth it and easy to do yourself. Amazon.
  • Zerofoo "What's going on?"Auto manufacturers can't find their butts with both hands.Jokes aside, auto companies know what their customers want, but they are having trouble balancing that with what regulators think we should own.
  • Dave M. From my admittedly limited experience at 8-10 H-K dealers over the past 15 years, they're all kind of shady to different degrees. The closest Kia dealer to the house is a no-go with any of their brands - Kia, Mazda, Ford, Lincoln. He caters to the LCD and its desperation all around.... You feel dirty just driving past his dealerships....
  • Mcs EV technology is advancing quickly. NIO live-streamed their CEO driving an ET7 with new battery tech 648 miles with 7% battery left at the end. The battery was 150kW, but was only 44 lbs heavier and the same size as their older tech 100 kW battery. CATL announced their Shenzing Plus LFP battery that would be going into numerous vehicles soon that would have a 620 mile range. Charging rate is 370 miles of range in 10 minutes. As a planner, you have to guess where the market is going to be several years from now. In 5 years, ICE will not have a single advantage over EV technology. Sure, right now a 600 mile range ICE vehicle is cheaper than a 600 mile EV and there aren't a lot of charging stations that are 4C and capable of a 370 mile charge in ten miles, but that won't be the case 5 years from now.
  • 3SpeedAutomatic It's not that they had bad sales practices. The issue is that they got caught because they became too greedy!!I'm sure Kia turned a blind eye when it made overall sales look good.Yet, someone dropped a dime, HQ redundantly got involved, and to cover their arse, HQ is suing the franchise and claiming victim status!!Reminds me of FARGO when the Executive Sales Manager (William Macy) obtained financing from GMAC for non-existing cars. 🚗🚗🚗
Next