Ford’s electric ambitions just hit a major speed bump. The Blue Oval confirmed that production of the F-150 Lightning will remain on ice “for the foreseeable future” following the devastating fire at the Novelis aluminum plant in Oswego, New York—one of Ford’s key suppliers. The September 16 blaze heavily damaged the facility, and the fallout could cost Ford up to $1 billion as the automaker scrambles to reshuffle its production strategy.
In the wake of the fire, Ford is pivoting hard back to internal combustion. The company plans to boost gas and hybrid F-Series output by more than 50,000 trucks in 2026, a move it says will help “meet strong customer demand and recover production losses stemming from the fire.” The shift isn’t just about supply chain logistics—it’s also about profitability. Gas and hybrid F-150s “are more profitable” and “use less aluminum” than the Lightning, Ford says.
Reallocating Resources
The production pause means a major shake-up inside Ford’s manufacturing network. Workers at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center, home of the Lightning, will be reassigned to a new third shift at the Dearborn Truck Plant, where the automaker builds gas-powered F-150s. That move alone will create up to 900 new jobs, as Ford ramps up its bread-and-butter truck output.
Meanwhile, the Kentucky Truck Plant—another F-Series stronghold—will also see expanded operations. Ford is investing $60 million there to increase efficiency, enough to squeeze out one extra truck per hour, adding more than 5,000 additional units per year. The plant will also welcome 100 new employees to help support the higher volume.
Electric Momentum, Interrupted
The production pause comes at an awkward time for Ford’s EV division. Lightning sales were up nearly 40 percent in Q3 2025, with over 10,000 units sold in the quarter. Year-to-date sales for the 2026 model sit at 23,034, up a modest 1.0 percent compared to last year—but that’s still a small slice of the F-Series pie.
For context, Ford sold nearly 200,000 gas and hybrid F-Series trucks last quarter, and close to 600,000 through September, marking a 13 percent increase year-over-year. Those numbers make Ford’s decision to prioritize the traditional lineup look less like a retreat from electrification and more like a practical recalibration.
Outlook: A Pause, Not a Pullback
Ford hasn’t said when Lightning production will resume, and with the extent of damage at the Novelis plant still being assessed, it could be a long wait. Still, this isn’t the end of the electric F-150—just a pause while Ford regroups. The company remains committed to electrification long-term, but for now, customer demand, supply constraints, and profitability are steering the ship.
In other words: Ford’s making what the people want—and right now, that’s still a truck with a gas tank.
Source: Ford