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Ford Motor Company announced plans to invest an additional $180 million in its Halewood EV powertrain facility in northern England. As the American automaker looks to go all-electric overseas by 2030, the fresh fund will help bolster the plants output by 70%, which should in turn supply powertrains to a large majority of European Ford models by 2026.

As a globally recognized automaker, Ford has been quite proactive in its transition to becoming an all-electric automotive brand. Its Mustang Mach-E has found great success in multiple markets, while its F-150 Lightning pickup continues to roll out in the US amid years of backlogged orders.

Even thought the American automaker only has a few EV models on the current market, its intentions to deliver many more have been quite public. Although we may not know what we will see from Ford next or when, we have seen plenty of evidence of the company gearing up EV component production behind the scenes.

In October, Ford announced a $280 million investment to transform its Halewood transmission facility to instead build electric power units for future European Ford passenger and commercial EVs. Production of those components is scheduled to begin in 2024. However, Ford has just announced an additional investment in Halewood to further support European EVs.

European Ford
Ford’s Halewood facility in the UK

Ford to bolster powertrain output to support European EVs

Ford shared news of its additional investment in Halewood via a press release this morning, which will include another $180 million to provide EV powertrains to 70% of European Ford models by 2026. Ford states the additional funding will increase annual production at the plant to 420,000 units per year, up from 250,000 previously (about 70%).

The investment also helps secure the jobs of over 500 employees at Halewood who will soon assist in EV component assembly for the European market. Ford’s European Industrial Operations vice-president Kieran Cahill spoke:

Ford is a global American brand, woven into the fabric of Europe for more than 100 years and a major employer here at Halewood for almost 60 years. Our vision in Europe is to build a thriving business, by extending leadership in commercial vehicles and through the electrification of our car range. Halewood is playing a critical part as our first in-house investment in EV component manufacturing in Europe.

Ford’s investment in Halewood is also its first in-house funding toward European electric vehicle component manufacturing and will support the company’s goal of delivering 2 million EVs around the globe by 2026.

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Tesla partners with Steak ‘n Shake on Superchargers with up to more than 100 locations

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Tesla partners with Steak 'n Shake on Superchargers with up to more than 100 locations

Tesla has partnered with Steak ‘n Shake to deploy Superchargers at up to more than 100 restaurant locations.

The partnership between Tesla and the American fast food chain has been revealed through a strange series of posts on X.

First, Tesla CEO Elon Musk commented on Steak ‘n Shake’s announcement that it is switching from using seed oils to beef tallow.

The restaurant responded by proposing “Tesla charging stations at Steak n Shake”, but they apparently didn’t know that it was already happening as Tesla responded that they had already signed on 6 sites and they have over 20 more in review:

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The Steak n Shake account responded by suggesting that the partnership extend to over 100 locations:

Thank you Tesla Charging!  Let’s do over 100 locations. Consider all sites approved!

The chain operates over 400 locations around the world – many of them in the midwest. A lot of these locations are located near highways, where Tesla prefers to deploy charging stations.

It’s not the first time that Tesla has partnered with a restaurant for multiple Supercharger locations. It also has a deal with Ruby Tuesday.

Tesla is currently deploying its latest V4 Superchargers capable of 500 kW – with the first stations expected to come online in the US later this year.

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Volkswagen ID.4 was the best-selling EV in Europe, top 3 in the US last month

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Volkswagen ID.4 was the best-selling EV in Europe, top 3 in the US last month

Volkswagen’s electric SUV is making a comeback. Last month, the Volkswagen ID.4 topped Tesla’s Model Y to become the best-selling EV in Europe, and it was even in the top three in the US.

Volkswagen ID.4 was EU’s best-selling EV, top 3 in the US

Although new vehicle registrations fell 2% in Europe last month, electric vehicles were a bright spot, with BEV sales up 37% from the year prior.

According to JATO Dynamics, 165,473 EVs were registered in Europe in January. The Volkswagen ID.4 took the top spot after registrations surged 195% to 7,177, overtaking the Tesla Model Y.

Tesla Model Y registrations plunged 46% in Europe last month to 6,155. The Model 3 refresh, which was launched in late 2023, had a 44% decline in registrations. Overall, Tesla registered only 9,913 vehicles in January 2025, a 45% decline from last year.

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While the arrival of the new Model Y plays a role, backlash against Elon Musk’s increasingly outspoken political antics is also causing widespread hate among owners in the US and Europe.

Volkswagen-ID.4-best-selling-EV
best-selling EVs and PHEVs in Europe in January 2025 (Source: JATO Dynamics)

Felipe Munoz, Global Analyst at JATO said the solid performance of EVs is “particularly impressive given the significant dip in sales that Tesla experienced” in January.

He explained, “it’s not unusual for sales to drop just before a new generation or an updated model is introduced to the market.”

Tesla-EV-registrations-Europe-January
Tesla vehicle registrations in Europe in January (Source: JATO Dynamics)

Although sales are expected to pick up again, Munoz added, “The performance of both the Model 3 and Model Y is an indication of the declining popularity of Tesla in Europe overall.”

Volkswagen is taking advantage with the ID.4 taking the top spot, and the ID.7 placing third with 5,879 registrations, up 657% from January 2024.

Volkswagen-ID.4-best-selling-EV
Volkswagen ID.4 (Source: Volkswagen)

Kia’s mass-market EV3h launched in late 2024, took fourth with 5,792, while the Skoda Enyaq rounded out the top five.

Chinese automakers, like BYD and MG, are starting to gain some real traction in Europe. With 37,134 vehicles registered last month, up 52% from January 2024, Chinese brands accounted for 3.7% of the market. That’s up from the 2.4% market share in January 2024.

Chinese-brands-market-share-Europe
Chinese auto brands market share in Europe (Source: JATO Dynamics)

Although still a relatively small number, combined, it would put them ahead of Ford, which registered 35,790 vehicles in Europe last month.

Electrek’s Take

The ID.4 appears to be making a comeback. After it went back on sale early last month, Volkswagen’s ID.4 was already the third best-selling EV in the US in January behind Tesla’s Model Y and Model 3.

Despite its success in Europe and the US, Volkswagen, like most global OEMs, is struggling in China. VW’s Chinese joint venture with SAIC cut the price of the ID.4 X, its version of the electric SUV sold in China, to under $20,000 (139,900 yuan) this week.

With leases starting as low as $189 per month in the US, it’s no wonder the ID.4 is already a top seller. If you’re ready to check it out for yourself, you can use our link to find deals on the Volkswagen ID.4 in your area.

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Elon Musk ‘cancels’ Tesla engineer for complaining about the CEO’s behavior

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Elon Musk 'cancels' Tesla engineer for complaining about the CEO's behavior

Elon Musk has reportedly ‘canceled’ a Tesla engineer for complaining about the CEO’s behaviors on social media.

As we recently reported, Tesla insiders are finally starting to speak out against Elon Musk over his increasingly unhinged social media presence.

For example, just today, he called CNN legal analyst Norm Eisen’s family a “crime family” because someone wrongly claimed that his daughter received millions of dollars from USAID when it was just someone with the same last name.

However, it looks like Musk and Tesla are actively suppressing employees speaking out.

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The New York Times reports that Tesla has fired Jared Ottmann, a manager of battery thermal supplier industrialization engineering, over his complaints about Musk.

Ottmann, who has been at Tesla for 6 years, says that he has been raising concerns internally about Musk’s use of social media for the last 3 years, but he ramped up his effort last month after Musk’s salute at the Trump inauguration.

The engineer specifically took offense to a tweet that Musk posted in the aftermath of the inauguration. Instead of apologizing and saying that he didn’t mean to make a Nazi salute, Musk decided to attack the media for even suggesting that the gesture was a Sieg Heiland tweeted this:

Ottmann commented on the post:

This post by Tesla’s current CEO name drops genocidal assholes as a joke and has 308,000 likes.

The engineer says that he raised the issue with Tesla and while he gets “personally support”, he says the company remains silent about Musk’s behavior:

Starting in 2022 and especially the last week I’ve raised the issue internally multiple times, with managers, HR, legal compliance, investor relations. And while overwhelmingly people offer personal support, Tesla as a company has remained silent.

Ottmann, who has been promoted 4 times in 6 years at Tesla, has now been let go.

Electrek’s Take

For a guy who calls himself a “free speech absolutist” and “anti-cancel culture”, he canceled this engineer pretty quickly when he didn’t like how he was exercising his free speech.

This is obviously an attempt at scaring other Tesla employees from speaking out at Tesla.

It’s one of my main concerns about the automaker: it’s not a meritocracy that attracts top engineering talent anymore. One of the main criteria to work at Tesla now is to support its CEO, who is off the deep end.

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