My suspicions on why Ford is not trying too hard to push it's Focus electric car right now is that they understand the limitations of it. It fulfills a need temporarily, and, if not economically feasible on it's own, does help meet requirements. It also serves as a test bed for public acceptance of size and performance standards. We hear the rumors of better battery tech just around the corner, longer mileage and faster charge rates all at a more affordable cost. Ford knows this even better and choses to limit the current production because the FFE will be supplanted by a far superior car in a Few years or so. Rather than invest in a car that doesn't gain them profit, and will be effectively obsolete in a short period of time, I think they are concentrating on new tech and a dedicated platform that will serve the small, intermediate, full-size and SUV platforms with minimal cross platform adaptation. It really makes more sense to do it that way, save money for development rather than spend it on a soon to be obsolete platform that has limited future support or upgradeability. Having said all that I do still love my Focus and intend to keep it for a very long time. (perhaps trade the C-Max for a long range electric when the tech catches up to the idea. )