Ford Ranger and Everest development to remain in Australia

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Development of the Ford Ranger – and almost certainly its SUV sister model, the Everest – will continue to take place in Australia for at least another generation.

Although Ford is yet to officially confirm it, that’s the key takeout from several senior Ford product development executives as the Blue Oval launches the MY26.50 Ranger, an upgraded version of Australia’s top-selling model for the past three years.

Ford remains the only automaker with the know-how and facilities required to design, engineer and develop a vehicle from the ground up in this country, and Ford Australia is the global ‘centre of excellence’ for the T6 ladder-frame platform that underpins the Ford Ranger, Everest and Bronco, and the Volkswagen Amarok.

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The past two generations of the Ranger were created in Australia by more than 1000 local designers and engineers, including the PX series of 2011 and the current RA series of 2022, and Ford has invested $5 billion in Australian research and development over the past 10 years, with $500 million being committed each year since Ford ceased local manufacturing in 2016.

But Ford is yet to confirm a new Ranger will be developed Down Under. In fact, in March this year during a flying visit to tour the company’s local facilities, Ford CEO Jim Farley warned that Australian product development could cease unless there are changes to the federal government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES).

These regulations will see auto brands cop financial penalties for selling high-emitting vehicles, such as the diesel-powered Ranger and Everest, if they don’t sufficiently offset them with lower-emitting vehicles such as electric vehicles (EVs).

At the recent MY26.50 Ranger launch, however, Ford reiterated it will continue to develop vehicles in Australia “for the foreseeable future”, and indicated it’s already thinking about the next generation of Australia’s and Europe’s favourite ute, which is currently sold in at least 180 markets globally.