2012/12/18

New Interior Trim Saves Fuel, Cuts Carbon Emissions and Lowers Costs on 2013 Ford Fusion

FORD CANADA - Can the trim around a window switch save thousands of litres of fuel?

It can if it was specified by Ford engineers.

The window switch surround in the new Ford Fusion saves 10,200 litres of diesel fuel usage and 27,000 kilograms of carbon dioxide emissions annually.

Traditionally, moulded plastic pieces have been painted with a high-gloss finish to deliver both fashionable design and tough-as-nails durability that customers demand. But thanks to a new breakthrough in materials from supplier BASF, Ford is able to skip that step, thereby saving cost and reducing the environmental impact during production of the 2013 Ford Fusion.

If clear-coat paint had been used on these particular parts with the new Fusion, it would have required Ford's supplier to ship parts from Kalamazoo, Mich., to Grand Rapids, Mich. This added step would have involved fueling and operating a fleet of trucks that emit tons of carbon dioxide, and subsequently applying a high-gloss finish to the parts that would then emit VOCs into the atmosphere. By creating a new resin that is mar-resistant, this entire step was eliminated.

Here's how it works: The round trip between the plastic part moulder in Vicksburg, Mich., and the painter in Grand Rapids is 206 kilometers. It takes roughly 68 litres of diesel fuel for the transport truck for each trip. The trip is made three days a week, which requires 204 litres of fuel. Presuming 50 weeks per year of production, this means Ford is saving 10,200 litres of diesel and eliminating 27,000 kilograms of CO2 from Fusion production each year.

All of this from changing the material in the trim around the window switches.

The innovation shows that when it comes to reducing costs and the environmental impact of auto manufacturing, it's not one thing. It's everything.

As consumers have come to expect high-quality, premium plastics in their vehicles, automakers and suppliers have worked to create materials that not only look and feel great, but also hold up to the constant wear and tear on a vehicle's interior surfaces, especially those parts that are constantly being used by customers.

"We need to leave no stone unturned in our continuous quest to make auto manufacturing as environmentally friendly as possible," says Robert Bedard, Body Interior Core Engineer for Ford. "This improved resin saves Ford significant dollars, but it also helps eliminate VOC from being released into the atmosphere, since the application of clear-coat paint is no longer required.

"As is so often the case with manufacturing, going green means saving green," Bedard adds. "We cut fuel usage, VOC and carbon emissions, and we save 50 per cent on the cost of these parts alone."

More information regarding the 2013 Fusion, on sale now, can be found at http://www.ford.com/cars/fusion/2013/