The Australian-led design, engineering and development base for the Ford Ranger is under threat from rising costs due to local emissions regulations and the ‘innovation premium’ of doing business in this country, according to Ford CEO Jim Farley.

Mr Farley, who is at the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne this weekend to support the debut of Ford’s partnership with Red Bull, said the local engineering for which the Ranger is renowned won’t continue if the federal government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) isn’t tweaked.

“It’s a choice, because that engineering can be done in a lot of other places cheaper and faster,” Mr Farley told media including CarExpert.

“Here in Australia, versus China or Vietnam or other places, there is a premium for innovation. So we’re willing to pay, but your government has to decide if they want engineers in their country, or do you want a country of hairdressers and bankers?”

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“They need to decide if they want to help us equalise the cost differential, because this is among the most expensive places to have engineers on the planet.”

The current-generation Ranger’s engineering ‘homeroom’ – the engineering hub of its development – was at Broadmeadows in Melbourne, where local design and engineering teams produced the Ranger and its spin-offs, the Toyota Prado-rivalling Everest large SUV and Ford Bronco off-roader (not sold here).

It also engineered the Ranger Raptor and its latest product is the Ranger Super Duty, a rival to the Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series.

The Australian-engineered Ranger led to the nameplate being reintroduced in the US in late 2018, following input from local teams given its important role in North America’s competitive mid-size pickup market.