Springboks score tries in Nissan Navara Pro4X
Two leading Springbok rugby players, Aphelele Fassi and Jordan Hendrikse, have taken delivery of their new Nissan Navara Pro4X bakkies in Durban.
- Industry News
- 12 May 2026
This past Tuesday (15 November), Ford Motor Company CEO, Jim Farley, made a thrilling claim, saying the manufacturing of electric vehicles would need 40% less labour than internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles.
By now it has become part of EV lore that the maintenance of these vehicles will be much cheaper owing to the simplicity of EVs compared to their fossil-fuel counterparts. But Farley’s claim, which follows that simplicity also means simplicity in production, has not often been discussed.
Farley, speaking at a conference in Detroit, said this meant the company has to pursue more vertical integration by retraining workers instead of laying them off in order for Ford to manufacture more parts in-house. This will hark back to the heydays of Ford when Henry Ford owned forests, iron mines, limestone quarries and even a rubber plantation in Brazil in an attempt to wholly control the company’s supply chain.
Farley said: “If Henry Ford came back to life, he would have thought the last 60 years weren’t that exciting, but he would love it right now because we’re totally reinventing the company.”
In the light of Ford’s target of reaching 50% EV sales by 2030, Farley acknowledged that the transition would be challenging and that there would be “storm clouds”.
Farley pointed out that the battery production process was one area where jobs could be added and workers could be retrained.
Opel has unveiled a key project under development in its model strategy: a completely new, all-electric SUV in the important and highly competitive C-segment that would extend the current line-up.
Nissan’s decision to drop a planned $500 million investment in electric vehicle (EV) production at its Canton, Mississippi plant is the latest indication that established manufacturers are reassessing how quickly the market will shift to battery power.
Zero Carbon Charge (CHARGE) welcomes the government’s extension of short term fuel levy relief measures aimed at cushioning consumers from rising fuel prices, but cautions that these interventions do not address the underlying structural challenge facing South Africa’s transport economy.