"“Circular manufacturing” has the promise to reduce waste by
reusing parts to make new cars. There are glimmers of hope, but they are
currently outweighed by challenges.
Car tailpipes belch out an estimated 4.6 metric tons of
carbon dioxide yearly, but cars begin to pollute long before they ever hit the
road. And they continue to pollute long after they are junked. They begin to
use energy and emit carbon through extraction and production of the steel,
rubber, plastics, glass, lithium and leather used to build them. When scrapped,
they molder in junkyards, emitting chlorofluorocarbons, and dripping oils and
acids that are a hazard to groundwater.
Now scientists, environmentalists, policymakers and car
manufacturers are advancing an idea that could change that. An industrial
concept called “circular manufacturing” aims to break the cycle of take, make,
use and toss, by building cars whose components can be endlessly reused to make
new cars.
The idea is new enough that there is no standard definition
— there isn’t even an agreed-on name. It’s variously called circular
manufacturing, the circular economy or manufacturing in a circular economy.
Nevertheless, circular manufacturing is part of the European Green Deal, which
establishes the groundwork for new regulations for car companies.
Although the idea is barely past the conceptual stage, car
companies are already rushing to claim circular superiority. “GM Technology is
a leader in Circular Economy,” crowed a 2020 news release. BMW, Ford, Toyota,
Tesla and others have also made claims on the circular future. Industry
observers caution that, for now, the circular economy’s chief value may be
public relations.
“This is a ripe opportunity for a lot of greenwashing by
automotive firms,” said Richard Gregory, an economics professor at East
Tennessee State University who studies the practice. “Are they actively looking
to mislead? At this point it’s hard to say because there are no federal
regulations about what they are doing.”
The central characteristic of circular manufacturing —
circularity — creates both a quandary and an opportunity: There is no one place
to start, and each part of the cycle is as important as the next. That means
there is no one central problem to address, but it also means even obscure
elements of car-making can contribute to improvement.
Despite the challenges, there are glimmers of progress from
companies as diverse as a super-car start-up in California, a student project
in the Netherlands, and an automotive parts consortium.
“People think we are talking about only recycling, but it is
very much larger than that,” said Abhishek Gupta, who leads the World Economic
Forum’s Circular Cars Initiative. Broadly, the idea is to reduce how much energy
and material go into making a car. There are a number of ways to do that: using
more wind and solar energy in the manufacturing process, for instance, or
making parts of less or recycled material. “By looking at the measures of
carbon and resources you consume, you can really look at your level of
circularity,” Mr. Gupta said.
It sounds simple. But a study published in 1998 by the
Society of Automotive Engineers found that midsize American sedans comprised
about 20,000 components. Cars have only gotten more complex, which is a
challenge for recyclers, said Greg Keoleian, lead author of the study, now a
professor at the University of Michigan’s Center for Sustainable Systems.
“There’s a lot of room for improvement at end of life of the vehicle,” Mr.
Keoleian said.
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Car recyclers strip valuable parts, like working engines,
for reuse. The remaining hulks go to scrap metal companies, which typically
shred the rest. But the mixed alloy shred has limited use.
Take aluminum. “The aluminum stream in that case is a mix of
a lot of different alloys, including cast alloy, which doesn’t go well back
into sheet,” which is used in body panels, said John Weritz, vice president of
standards and technology at the Aluminum Association. The demand for unmixed
material is growing as carmakers increasingly use lightweight aluminum body
panels, he said.
In circular manufacturing, the answer to the sorting problem
is to change the design process to include a plan for dismantling, so a retired
car is easy to separate into like sources of metal, plastic, rubber and glass.
Setting cars up to provide easily recycled materials helps free manufacturers
from supply chain issues: The car becomes its own supply chain.
One place the car industry says it is making tangible gains
is in packing and shipping materials. “We reduced packaging by using reusable
shipping containers,” said Kevin Butt, chairman of the Suppliers Partnership
for the Environment, a consortium of companies and government agencies that
deal with transportation. Although the idea isn’t new, Toyota North America,
where Mr. Butt is director of environmental sustainability, said that since
2017 it has reduced 65 million pounds of cardboard and 171 million pounds of wooden
crates, and has saved $273 million by using containers molded of recycled
plastic to ship parts like struts, catalytic converters and steering wheel
shafts. The consortium wants to see the practice adopted by all of its members.
Between building and recycling there is, of course, use. The
circular goal there is to extend how long a car remains on the road: Fewer new
cars mean fewer materials and less energy needed to build a new one. But there
is a hitch — at a certain point keeping an aged car running may contribute more
to pollution than building a new one would.
“If we keep gas-guzzlers on the road too long, we are
benefiting from a material point of view, but not from an emissions point,”
said Jennifer Russell, who co-wrote a U.N. report on the circular economy.
One of the more ambitious projects to keep cars on the road
is Renault’s Refactory in Flins, France, a 915,000-square-foot facility
dedicated to a vast experiment in making and refurbishing cars, and converting
some to electric power. It is creating a dismantling line, to provide parts for
discontinued cars, as well as unmixed streams of metals and plastics for
recycling. It may also convert some gas-powered vehicles to electric, with a
goal of recommissioning 25,000 vehicles this year.
The main element of the experiment concerns how to make
circularity feasible as a business. “They can’t do everything because it’s good
for the environment; they have to have business reason for it,” said Alice
Bodreau, global partners manager at the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, a nonprofit
dedicated to the circular economy, which is partnering with Renault.
All of this has gained the attention of major carmakers.
Last year BMW made a splash at the International Motor Show in Munich with the
iVision, a concept car it said is completely recyclable. But those efforts are
way behind a lesser known student effort at Eindhoven University of Technology
in the Netherlands, which has been producing recyclable concept cars for years.
The students, who are now on their fourth generation of this
vehicle, which this year is called ZEM, for Zero Emission Mobility, may still
be ahead of the majors. BMW’s lauded iVision was styled like an economy car:
tiny, square-ish and simple. The students found the public indifferent to a
similar aesthetic in their previous versions — but they have a plan to solve
that problem.
“This year we wanted to make a really badass-looking car so
people would want to interact with it,” said Louise de Laat, manager of the
student team for the school’s TUecomotive effort. The ZEM, built for
approximately $50,000, bears passing resemblance to the sporty BMW 4 M Coupe,
and is made of 3-D printed plastic reinforced with glass or carbon fiber. The
ZEM is currently being shipped to America for a tour.
Of course, carmaker’s concept models and student projects
are unconstrained by safety regulations. But the car company Divergent 3D is
now producing the Czinger 21C, which is not only designed using principles of
circular manufacturing, but is also street legal and set a track speed record
at Laguna Seca.
The car is built using 3-D printing that reduces the amount
of material used in a car by an average of 40 percent, without compromising
strength.
The parts, printed of aluminum, can be atomized and the
powder reused, which would seem energy intensive, but the company founder,
Kevin Czinger, said, “The amount of energy is far less when you take into
account you are extracting materials through mining.”
Unfortunately, for the time being, the “eco” in
“eco-friendly” does not stand for economy. The first major manufacturer to use
a Divergent 3-D printed subframe is Aston Martin, which will put one in the
head-turning limited production DBR22 convertible. The price? A base model will
cost you around $2 million."
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