Ford’s new EV platform aims for the Moon, hopefully charging stations are included

It feels like the days of the Detroit Auto Show being a global party are over, but Ford didn’t need confetti to make a statement this year. Instead, they used the stage—and a quieter appearance at CES 2026—to lay out a strategy that feels less like a product roadmap and more like a survival guide.

CEO Jim Farley didn’t mince words when speaking to InsideEVs, comparing Ford’s current situation to the Apollo missions. It sounds dramatic, sure, but when you look at what they are trying to pull off with their Red Bull Formula 1 partnership and the secretive “Universal EV” (UEV) platform, the stakes really are that high.

The UEV project is arguably the one to watch

This isn’t just another electric car; it’s a complete reset of how Ford builds vehicles. Born from a “skunkworks” team in California staffed by former Tesla, Apple, and Rivian engineers, this platform is designed to kill the inefficiencies that have plagued legacy automakers. We are talking about a $30,000 electric pickup coming in 2027 that uses 20% fewer parts and runs on a zonal electrical architecture capable of “eyes-off” driving a year after launch.

Farley confirmed this isn’t just a concept anymore – prototypes are already running

They have even retooled factories and installed massive “megacasting” machines, signaling that they are all-in.

But getting here wasn’t pretty. Ford had to make some brutal calls, including canceling the F-150 Lightning’s direct successor and pivoting big SUVs back to hybrid engines. It was a painful admission that the old way wasn’t working. Now, the UEV platform is their main bet to actually make money on EVs, aiming for a cost structure that can compete with Chinese giants like BYD.

And that is the real ghost haunting this machine. with political winds shifting and competitors like Geely eyeing the U.S. market, Ford knows it has zero breathing room. Whether this new platform ends up underpinning the next Mustang Mach-E or just a family of affordable haulers, one thing is clear: Ford is betting the farm on this “moonshot.” If it lands, they reinvent the company. If it doesn’t, the future looks a lot harder.

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