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Ford and Toyota end an agreement to co-develop a rear-wheel-drive hybrid-electric system for SUVs and pickups.
The auto makers inked the agreement in August 2011, with a goal to jointly develop the new hybrid powertrain to mitigate costs and increase speed-to-market of new products.
In a statement, Toyota says the auto makers have agreed to develop hybrid systems individually, but will continue to evaluate the feasibility of working together on next-generation standards for telematics systems and will consider other areas of future collaboration.
Ford says it plans to move forward on its own development of a RWD hybrid system to be launched later this decade.
“We know what it takes to build world-class hybrids, and we now will build and leverage that expertise in-house,” Raj Nair, Ford group vice president-global product development, says in a statement. “By continuing to develop a rear-wheel-drive hybrid system on our own, we can extend our advanced-hybrid technologies to new vehicle segments.”