“‘The ultimate solution is the electrification of the vehicle,’ said [Ford Car Czar Derrick] Kuzak, who stressed he was speaking as an engineer and was not commenting specifically on Ford’s future product plans.” God forbid Ford should commit to a single technology, ’cause that might cause more of the old bureaucratic infighting for which The Blue Oval Boyz are famous. Anyway, The Detroit News reports that Derrick’s mate Jim Farley (of the RI Farleys) also reckons ethanol hydrogen the flux capacitor electricity is the “gas of tomorrow’s cars.” “Speaking to reporters separately [so as not to coordinate their stories], Ford’s chief marketing officer, Jim Farley, echoed Kuzak’s enthusiasm for electric vehicles. ‘All I know is that when I talk to customers about electrification they say, ‘That’s cool!’ We better be prepared as an industry.'” Yes, well, by the end of this electrifying cheerleading session, Kuzak backpedals from his “one alt power to rule them all” prognostication. “Kuzak said government intervention or consumer preference could ultimately make one of the other alternative power technologies a more viable choice and that’s why Ford is committed to developing all of them. ‘We have to, because we don’t know how it’s going to play out.'” That’s cool!
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I still can’t get over the fact that Jim Farley is related to Chris. If Ford can’t turn it around, then poor Jim will be on government cheese living in an E-Series van DOWN BY THE RIVER!
Damn, you got me. I had to check Wikipedia to see if they really are related.
Speaking of Farley, doesn’t the plot of Tommy Boy remind you of the plight of the auto industry?
Great picture of the wife. Thanks!
Ford Car Czar Derrick Kuzak said: “The ultimate solution is the electrification of the vehicle.”
V.I. Lenin said: “Communism is soviet power plus electrification.”
Hope it works out better this time.
So gas went up about a dollar over the past year. Will gas go up another dollar over the next tweleve months?
Robert:
What do you think Kuzak is thinking of when he mentions that government intervention might determine the viable choice? Beside the $50B loan that probably wouldn’t create anything technologically useful, what intervention could he be talking about?
tony-e30
What do you think Kuzak is thinking of when he mentions that government intervention might determine the viable choice? Beside the $50B loan that probably wouldn’t create anything technologically useful, what intervention could he be talking about?
Some kind of big ass federal initiative/tax break, probably related to hydrogen, natural gas, oil (suddenly cheap U.S.-sourced gas), coal-power or flux capacitorization.
No opinion on the article, but thanks for reminding me of one of my favorite movies!
Giorgio Moroder soundtrack, Virginia Madsen as the girl next door…. I’ve loved cellos ever since!