Production of the Ram 1500 REV has been pushed back to 2026 because of “slowing industry demand.”

Automakers and brands, from mass market to luxury to exotic, grappled with slowing electric vehicle adoption in 2024, prompting program delays and suspensions that are already spilling over into 2025.

Some brands walked back ambitious EV product targets set years ago. Others altered EV production schedules in the near term. Donald Trump’s reelection in November’s U.S. presidential election has also created political and policy headwinds. His transition team reportedly wants to eliminate the $7,500 federal tax credit used to spur EV demand.

Trump’s transition team is also recommending sweeping changes to cut off support for EVs and charging stations and to strengthen measures blocking cars, components and battery materials from China, Reuters has reported.

For some of the world’s biggest suppliers, the change in EV timing will weigh heavily on future earnings as they make fewer parts for EVs than they were banking on.

Here is a collection of EV product delays and pauses, as well as production-related delays that were announced in 2024 and 2025.

The U.K. automaker has pushed back the debut of its first battery-electric vehicle to 2026 from 2025 because of a lack of consumer demand. Aston Martin, which announced the delay in early 2024, is using EV technology from Lucid Motors for several planned battery-electric vehicles.

Bentley's sketch of its first full-electric car shows a similar profile to the Bentayga but with a more compact footprint.
Bentley’s sketch of its first full-electric car shows a similar profile to the Bentayga but with a more compact footprint.

The British ultraluxury brand launched a strategic plan in 2020 named Beyond 100, which called for a rush of new EVs and to go all-electric by 2030. But Bentley in November 2024 pivoted and rebranded the plan Beyond 100+, which now calls to go all-electric in 2035. Bentley’s first EV will be what it calls a “luxury urban” SUV and will be unveiled in 2026, with sales starting in 2027. Bentley first planned to launch its first EV in 2025 followed by four other electric models spaced a year apart before going all-electric by 2030.

Ford Motor Co. in August cancelled long-planned three-row electric crossovers and delayed its next-generation full-size electric pickup by 18 months. The launch of the pickup, codenamed “T3,” was pushed back by more than a year to late 2027. While vehicle output has been delayed, Ford said a battery plant at its Blue Oval City complex in Tennessee remains on track to begin producing cells in 2025.

General Motors in early December said it no longer needed four U.S. battery plants to support EV output and will sell its stake in one of the facilities to joint-venture partner LG Energy Solution. The Ultium Cells plant under construction near Lansing, Mich., will become wholly owned by LG and supply an automaker other than GM.

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