New Cars Increasingly Composed of Recycled Materials

Recycled Car

We all know recycling is good for the planet. Melting down old soda bottles to make new ones reduces what goes into landfills and the amount of oil used to make many plastics. What may surprise you is that your old Coke bottle may be a part of your new car. 

According to the Association of Postconsumer Plastic Recyclers, 9 percent of all recycled milk jugs, laundry detergent bottles and other high-density polyethylenes ended up in cars in 2008. 

Those recycled jugs and bottles can be used for the plastic wheel-arch liners and battery trays in cars. Not incidentally, the Ford Focus uses 100% recycled material for these components, according to Debbie Mielewski, technical leader of plastics research at the automaker. GM uses recycled materials to make some sound-deadening materials for the Buick LaCrosse and the door-handle brackets and engine fan components on other GM vehicles. 

These recycled materials can even be used to make the soft fabric-like materials inside your automobile, including the suede-looking fabrics, which is composed of plastic yarn made from old soda bottles, in the new Ford Taurus SHO and Lincoln MKZ. 

Using recycled scrap material can even be more eco-friendly than using bio-materials, which come from organic substances, such as the soy oil Ford uses in the Escape and Mustang to build its seat cushions, seatbacks and headliners. 

There are still challenges with using recycled materials. Mielewski said Ford hasn’t figured out a way to remove the milk odor from old milk jugs, so recycled plastic made from milk jugs can’t be used in the interior. 

GM estimates that 5 to 10% of the plastics used in its vehicles are recycled, while Ford claims to have recycled 25 to 30 million pounds of plastic that would otherwise have ended up in landfills for 2008. 

Your Next Car Is Filled With Trash (Translogic)

By Colin Bird | July 22, 2010 | Comments (0)

Comments 

Post a Comment 

Please remember a few rules before posting comments:

  • If you don't want people to see your email address, simply type in the URL of your favorite website or leave the field empty.
  • Do not mention specific car dealers by name. Feel free to mention your city, state and brand.
  • Try to be civil to your fellow blog readers. This blog is not a fan or enthusiast forum, it is meant to help people during the car-buying process and during the time between purchases, so shoppers can keep a pulse on the market.
  • Stay on topic. We want to hear your opinions and thoughts, but please only comment about the specified topic in the blog post.
view posting rules

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Search Results

KickingTires Search Results for

Search Kicking Tires

KickingTires iPhone App
Ask.cars.com