BlueOval SK

BlueOval SK

Joint venture battery manufacturing for EVs

Overview

BlueOval SK is a joint venture between Ford Motor Company and SK On that builds and supplies EV batteries for Ford and Lincoln. It operates three large battery plants in Tennessee and Kentucky to manufacture lithium-ion cells and packs that power electric vehicles. The partnership combines automaker backing with battery expertise and pursues a large, domestic production footprint to serve Ford and Lincoln directly. Its goal is to deliver safe, dependable batteries at scale for Ford and Lincoln while creating thousands of American jobs.

About BlueOval SK

Simplify's Rating
Why BlueOval SK is rated
B-
Rated B on Competitive Edge
Rated B on Growth Potential
Rated C on Differentiation

Industries

Automotive & Transportation

Industrial & Manufacturing

Energy

Company Size

11-50

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

Stanton, Tennessee

Founded

2022

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • $11B invested creates 5,000 jobs and $265M payroll in Hardin County.
  • Hardin County population grows 22,000 by 2026 from plant influx.
  • Production began August 19 at Kentucky campus for Ford EVs.

What critics are saying

  • Second lawsuit filed September 24, 2025 alleges unpaid overtime violating FLSA.
  • 1,514 employees face mass layoff December 16, 2025 without 60-day WARN notice.
  • UAW unionized Kentucky plant after safety complaints forces wage concessions.

What makes BlueOval SK unique

  • BlueOval SK joint venture between Ford and SK On builds US battery plants.
  • Three 4 million sq ft facilities in Kentucky and Tennessee for EV batteries.
  • Secured $9.63B DOE loan boosting domestic production starting 2025.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Paid Vacation

Parental Leave

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Company News

Transport Topics
Dec 15th, 2025
Ford to Suffer $19.5 Billion Hit Tied to EV Reduction

Ford to suffer $19.5 billion hit tied to EV reduction. Ford Kentucky EV battery plant will become facility to produce cells for energy storage; all 1,600 to be laid off for conversion. A Ford dealership in Richmond, Calif. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg) Key takeaways: Ford Motor Co. will take $19.5 billion in charges tied to a sweeping overhaul of its electric vehicle business after struggling for years to make it profitable. The majority of the charges will come in the fourth quarter, Ford said in a Dec. 15 statement. As part of the strategic shift, the automaker is canceling a planned electric F-Series truck, shifting production toward gas and hybrid vehicles and repurposing an EV battery plant. Ford will also convert its signature electric F-150 Lightning pickup into an extended-range hybrid vehicle. The magnitude of asset impairments and write-downs are a testament both to the degree of difficulty Ford has had trying to profitably build and sell EVs, and the extent to which President Donald Trump's policy changes will only exacerbate those challenges. In taking the charges, Ford is acknowledging it built far too much battery production capacity and was going down a dead end with large EVs that were destined to lose more money. The moves will make Ford's Model e EV operations profitable by 2029, Andrew Frick, head of the EV unit, told reporters in a briefing. Ford lost $5.1 billion in its EV division last year and expects losses could be worse this year. "The operating reality has changed, and we are redeploying capital into higher-return growth opportunities," Ford CEO Jim Farley said in a statement. The automaker boosted its 2025 guidance to $7 billion before interest and taxes, up from a prior estimate of $6 billion to $6.5 billion. Ford shares rose 1% in extended New York trading at 4:37 p.m. The stock had risen 38% so far this year. Farley has predicted consumer demand for plug-ins will fall by half after Trump ripped up most of former President Joe Biden's policy platform. Now companies are trying to find ways to limit the financial damage caused by idle plants. In October, General Motors Co. took $1.6 billion in charges to write down EV assets. One of the most promising options is converting EV battery plants to produce cells for stationary storage, where demand is booming thanks to growth in AI data centers and needed upgrades to the power grid. Utility-scale battery storage rose 50% during the first 10 months of this year to nearly 39.3 gigawatts from the end of 2024, Energy Information Administration preliminary data shows. Storage cells can eke out more usage from the existing grid because big new power plants can't be built fast enough to serve data campuses that use as much power as cities. But to make a profit on the capital-intensive, technically challenging business of cell-making, manufacturers have argued that manufacturing tax credits are critical to make the plants economically viable. Ford is halting production at its Glendale, Ky., electric vehicle battery plant, which will undergo a $2 billion conversion to produce cells for energy storage to power the electric grid. The plant's 1,600 workers will be laid off during the conversion, but Ford plans to hire 2,100 people to support its energy storage business when the facility reopens in 2027. The automaker is taking control of side-by-side battery plants in Kentucky, following the breakup last week of a joint venture with South Korean battery maker SK On. Just one of those plants is operating, and Ford will switch its output to the lower-cost lithium iron phosphate cells utilizing a licensing agreement it has with Chinese battery maker Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Those batteries will be sold solely for energy storage. Its Marshall, Mich., plant will now also build LFP cells for energy storage as well as a new line of small, lower-cost EVs coming in 2027. Ford plans to convert a factory under construction in Stanton, Tenn., - its first new assembly plant in half a century - to build gas-powered trucks rather than pure electric pickups. The Tennessee truck plant will build a new model that's not currently in the automaker's lineup of small, medium and large pickups, the company said. Ford delayed the startup of that factory to 2029, from a previous plan to open in 2028 - which had been previously pushed back. The company said the majority of the $19.5 billion in special items will be recognized in its fourth-quarter earnings, with the remainder in 2026 and the following year. The company expects about $5.5 billion of cash impact from the charges, paid primarily next year. Ford said that by 2030, it expects half of its global sales volume will come from hybrids, extended range electric vehicles and pure EVs, up from 17% now. "These are big decisions that we believe will pay off for years," Frick said. "Rather than spending billions more on large EVs that now have no path to profitability, we are allocating that money into higher-returning areas."

The Courier-Journal
Oct 3rd, 2025
BlueOval SK EV battery maker faces second lawsuit over worker pay issues. What to know

* A second class-action lawsuit has been filed against BlueOval SK alleging the company failed to properly pay workers for overtime.

The Detroit News
Mar 7th, 2025
Motown in F1: Cadillac gets final green light for entry

GM will join Ford in F1 - the Blue Oval is a partner with the Red Bull team in 2028 providing batteries for its hybrid drivetrain, or "power unit" in F1 terminology.

CBT News
Dec 17th, 2024
DOE awards $9.63B loan to BlueOval SK to build battery plants in Kentucky and Tennessee

BlueOval SK has already invested over $11 billion into the construction of these facilities, with production at the Kentucky plant expected to begin in 2025, followed by the Tennessee facility later that year.

Notebookcheck
Dec 17th, 2024
Historic $9.63 billion loan to boost US battery production

The BlueOval SK joint venture's current goals include building three facilities in mainland America, each spanning 4 million square feet.

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