Skip to main content

Lincoln will launch its first electric vehicle with help from Rivian

Lincoln will launch its first production electric car with help from startup Rivian. Confirming previous reports, Lincoln announced that it will use Rivian’s “skateboard” platform for an upcoming electric vehicle. The partnership stems from Lincoln parent Ford’s investment in Rivian. Neither company would discuss a launch date, but a previous report said the electric Lincoln could arrive by 2022.

Lincoln didn’t offer much detail on the planned electric vehicle, but we do know a bit about the Rivian skateboard platform. It’s essentially a flat rectangle that contains all mechanical components, with four wheels attached (hence the skateboard reference). This allows Rivian to easily plop different bodies onto the basic chassis. Rivian has already shown an electric pickup truck called the R1T and an electric SUV called the R1S. Both will do zero to 60 mph in 3.0 seconds and have a range of up to 400 miles, according to Rivian.

The Rivian skateboard platform was developed for off-road vehicles, so it’s likely the upcoming electric Lincoln will be an SUV. As cool as it would be to see an electric reincarnation of the Lincoln Blackwood or Mark LT, the brand’s short-lived early 2000s pickups, SUVs are the cash cows. In a press release announcing the Rivian partnership, Lincoln noted that its 2019 SUV sales were the highest in 16 years. At the same time, Lincoln plans to discontinue the MKZ sedan in order to free up production capacity for other vehicles, leaving the Continental as the only non-SUV in the lineup. It’s a reflection of parent Ford’s current disinterest in cars.

Ford is eliminating most cars from its United States lineup, leaving only the Mustang. Ford unveiled its Mustang Mach-E electric SUV in late 2019, and is also working on an electric version of its bestselling F-150 pickup and a small electric car based on Volkswagen’s MEB platform, but the latter probably won’t be sold in the U.S.

In addition to borrowing VW’s MEB platform, Ford has also made a deal to use the German automaker’s Electrify America charging network for the Mustang Mach-E. Electrify America was created as part of VW’s diesel emissions cheating settlement, which requires the automaker to invest in zero-emission vehicle infrastructure. The charging network is open to cars from all manufacturers, and the existing relationship with Ford means Lincoln’s electric vehicle will likely use it. Lincoln currently sells plug-in hybrid versions of the Aviator and Corsair, but will need to offer more charging support for an all-electric model in order to alleviate customer concerns.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
2022 Volkswagen ID. Buzz first drive review: The iconic hippie hauler goes electric
Volkwagen's ID. Buzz drives down the road.

Volkswagen's growing family of ID-badged electric cars has a new mascot: the ID. Buzz. Inspired by the vintage air-cooled Bus models and previewed by a close-to-production concept unveiled in 2017, the heritage-laced van offers an electric powertrain, an eye-catching design, plus an interior that's high-tech and almost lounge-like. I tested a Buzz prototype in England in February 2022 and walked away impressed, and time driving a regular-production model in and around Copenhagen, Denmark, confirmed these impressions. This was worth the wait.
Design and interior
While you can tell that the Buzz is on the same branch of the Volkswagen family tree as the split- and bay-window Buses prized by hippies decades ago, designers decided not to go full-retro as they did with the New Beetle released in 1997. The headlights aren't round, for example, and they're much higher than the original van's. It's the same story out back: The lights are horizontal, located right below the big hatch's window, and connected by a light bar. This is intentional -- Volkswagen aimed to echo the original model without cloning it.

In terms of proportions, the Buzz is pretty spot on. The front end isn't entirely flat and the front doors are positioned behind the front wheels rather than over them, but the design is as close to the old van's as modern regulations allow. The Buzz variant that I drove in Denmark measures 185.5 inches long, 78.1 inches wide, and 76.8 inches tall, so it's about as long as a Tiguan but around 10 inches taller and five inches wider. This is what Volkswagen refers to as the short-wheelbase model, and it's not coming to the United States. We'll get a long-wheelbase model that hasn't been unveiled yet; it should look just like the European-spec model but with more space between the front and rear axles.

Read more
2022 Mercedes-Benz EQB first drive review: An EV better than its gas sibling
Front three quarter view of the 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQB.

Mercedes-Benz aims to go all-electric in at least some markets by 2030 but to do that it will need to launch electric equivalents of each of its many gasoline-powered models. The 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQB fits that description to the letter.

Where the EQS sedan aims to fill a similar role to the S-Class without directly copying it, the EQB is literally an electric version of an existing Mercedes crossover SUV — the GLB-Class. It uses the same body shell as the GLB, even retaining that model’s optional third-row seats.

Read more
2022 Rivian R1S first drive review: An EV SUV fit for an expedition or a drag race
The front three-quarter view of a 2022 Rivian against a rocky backdrop.

Rivian beat the likes of Ford, General Motors, and Tesla to market with an electric pickup truck, but now it’s time for act two.

The 2022 Rivian R1S shares most of its DNA with the Rivian R1T pickup released late last year, but in place of a bed, it has a three-row cabin with seating for seven. It retains the R1T’s distinctive styling, impressive off-road capability, and improbable acceleration, but in a package for drivers who need to carry people instead of stuff.

Read more