Volvo Cars To Use 25% Recycled Materials In New Models

Mobility Outlook Bureau
24 Sep 2021
06:50 AM
2 Min Read

The company is working actively to find high-quality and sustainable sources for many materials currently used in the wider car industry.


Volvo Cars

Based on survey findings, Volvo Cars aims for 25% of the material in its new cars to consist of recycled and bio-based content, by 2025, as part of its ambition to be a fully circular business by 2040.

According to a recent study, two-thirds of consumers consider a brand’s environmental policies as a critical factor when purchasing luxury products. The same percentage of buyers would like to see carbon labelling on products to provide greater transparency on the environmental impact of products and materials.

This means the material world is evolving, and designers worldwide are actively sourcing high-quality, sustainable and responsibly sourced materials as they strive to create the luxury products of the future.

These and other conclusions appear in The Rise of Conscious Design, a new report issued by Volvo Cars in collaboration with leading trend forecasting company The Future Laboratory.

Leather-free Interiors

The report’s publication coincides with Volvo Cars’ announcement that all its new fully electric models will be completely leather-free. The newly launched C40 Recharge is the first model to be fully devoid of leather.

The report draws on a wealth of existing research as well as new interviews and insights from thought leaders from a variety of industries, such as Claire Bergkamp, COO of The Textile Exchange and former Worldwide Sustainability and Innovation Director for Stella McCartney; Wen Zhou, CEO of 3.1 Phillip Lim; Dr Leonardi Bonnani, Founder and CEO of Sourcemap; and Xu Gang, Co-Founder of Bentu Design.

Volvo Cars

The conclusions and insights in the report in many ways reflect the carmaker’s vision on the future of materials. In the coming years, Volvo Cars will launch an entirely new family of pure electric cars, and by 2030 it aims to offer only fully electric cars – all of them free of leather.

As part of its intent, the company is working actively to find high-quality and sustainable sources for many materials currently used in the wider car industry.

Robin Page, Head of Design, Volvo Cars, said, “We have a vision of where we need to go in the future, with the first step to ensure we harness sustainable, natural and recycled materials. The next challenge is to change what we do with these materials, whether that’s making car parts that last forever, re-enter the circular economy or go back into the earth.”

Instead of leather interior options, Volvo Cars will offer its customers alternatives such as high-quality, sustainable materials made from bio-based and recycled sources.

For example, Nordico, a new interior material created by the carmaker, will consist of textiles made from recycled material such as PET bottles, bio-attributed material from sustainable forests in Sweden and Finland, and corks recycled from the wine industry – setting a new standard for premium interior design. This material will make its debut in the next generation of its models.

The company said that it will also continue to offer wool blend options from suppliers that are certified to source responsibly, as the company looks to ensure full traceability and animal welfare in its wool supply chain.

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