VW reduces environmental footprint at Kariega plant

The automotive manufacturing company continues to deliver high-quality vehicles in an environmentally responsible way.

Volkswagen South Africa (VWSA) is going to great lengths to reduce its environmental footprint at its Kariega plant. Two projects facilitate this effort: waste water recycling and solar panels. The first one is a waste water recycling facility, which has been constructed on-site at the plant. This facility will recycle production-related waste water from various production areas, for reuse in certain production processes. In addition to reducing the company’s freshwater consumption by an estimated 26%, it will also serve to reduce VWSA’s reliance on municipally supplied water amid the ongoing drought in the region.

At the same time, the company installed a total of 3 136 solar photovoltaic panels, which have been generating renewable, carbon-neutral energy since April. The panels, installed on the roof of the Final Assembly building, will reduce VWSA’s carbon emissions by an estimated 2 590 tons of carbon dioxide per year. At full capacity, the panels will produce an estimated 2 500 MWh, which is enough energy to cover between 3% and 3.5% of the plant’s electricity requirements.

Both projects form part of the priority of environmental sustainability in the company’s We//2025 corporate strategy, and are included in the Zero Impact Factory strategy VWSA embarked on in 2020. Zero Impact Factory, which follows the successes of VWSA’s Think Blue. Factory programme, is aimed at reducing the company’s production-related environmental footprint, with a specific focus on climate change, environmental impact, and the responsible use of natural resources.

In this regard, VWSA achieved the following reductions in 2021, compared to the baseline set in 2010 when Think Blue Factory was launched:

•     49% reduction in energy use
•     49% reduction in CO2 emissions
•     65% reduction in water use
•     66% reduction in waste
•     31% reduction in solvent emissions
•     50,9% reduction in overall environmental impact.

VWSA has also embarked on an ongoing biodiversity roadmap, starting in 2021 with a project to replace alien plants and trees within the Kariega premises with indigenous, water-wise plants such as spekboom, fever trees and coral trees. These efforts include planting a carbon bank of over 4 800 spekboom cuttings, as well as a 1 600m² green Volkswagen logo, in celebration of Earth Day in April 2021.

“As with our colleagues across the Volkswagen Group, we are committed to protecting the environment in whatever way we can,” said Ulrich Schwabe, production director of VWSA. “These two projects will make a massive difference in preserving the environment, and achieving our goal of carbon-neutral production by 2030. I am proud to say VWSA continues to deliver high-quality vehicles in an environmentally responsible way.”

Source: MotorPress

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