The American car giant Ford wants to increase the capacity for the planned growth by investing billions in its plants in the midwest of the United States.

The company is investing $3.7 billion in factories in Michigan, Ohio and Missouri, Ford announced on Thursday.

At 2.3 billion dollars, the majority of this is attributable to electric vehicles.

The sum is part of the announced expenditure of 50 billion dollars by 2026, with which Ford wants to catch up with the electric car manufacturer Tesla.

The investments now announced would create more than 6,200 new jobs, which would be represented by the powerful UAW auto union.

These include 3,000 previous part-time employees who are now to receive regular full-time contracts.

Ford is accelerating the transition to electromobility, following the goals of US President Joe Biden.

The investments and new jobs should, among other things, enable Ford boss Jim Farley to build around two million electric cars by 2026.

But the combustion engine brand Ford Blue should also benefit from the increase.

Ford announced $7 billion investments in Tennessee and Kentucky for electric cars and batteries last fall, which raised eyebrows in its home state of Michigan.

Michigan is considered a car manufacturing location with comparatively high costs.

The US government has given automakers a target of making half of all new cars on the market electric or plug-in by the end of the decade.

In return, millions in state aid will flow.