A vegan social media app gives users the option to own shares in the company
CategoriesSustainable News

A vegan social media app gives users the option to own shares in the company

Spotted: As the world increasingly turns to social media for news and entertainment, a new crop of sustainable startups are looking to tap into their pool of engaged users to further their social purpose. Vegan social media platform abillion is one such startup.

Launched in 2017 as a social platform for connecting people with plant-based food choices, the company is on a mission to make it easy for everyone to be an environmental hero. As the company has developed, it has shifted its focus to helping individuals and businesses become more aware of their choices and proactive about sustainability. It does this by funnelling back cashback rewards from brands to users, who can then direct those funds to their favorite environmental causes.

To date, abillion has given more than $1.4 million (around €1.33 million) to environmental causes, including Sea Shepherd and One Tree Planted. With over 60 recipients to choose from, users can easily support the causes they’re passionate about.

Now, in a first-of-its-kind move for social media, the vegan social app is giving its users the option to own shares in the company. The company says this represents a new concept of ownership and allows users of the platform to take a vested interest in its success. Previously, credits amassed by leaving reviews of vegan products could be redeemed for rewards like discounts or free products. But now those credits will be convertible into shares of abillion.

A democracy of ownership will allow users to not only connect with plant-based food choices, but also to have a say in which companies are featured on the platform. As a result, abillion is positioning itself as a leader in the sustainable food space. And with $1 in review credit equal to a $1 stake in the company when it goes public, abillion is giving its users a chance to profit with purpose.

Other innovations in environmental giving recently spotted by Springwise include a CSR platform that lets companies choose and monitor impact projects, an ad platform that rewards users for watching ads by giving them credit to donate to a cause of their choice, and a search engine that donates its profits to non-profit organisations.

Written By: Katrina Lane

Website: abillion.com

Contact: abillion.com/contact

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Nanofiltration reduces industrial chemical separation emissions
CategoriesSustainable News

Nanofiltration reduces industrial chemical separation emissions

Spotted: An invisible polluter, industrial chemical separation is a necessity in many industries, including pharmaceuticals, oil refinement, and semiconductor and vegetable oil production. Accounting for up to 15 per cent of the world’s energy use, the process of separating chemicals for commercial and industrial use creates significant volumes of carbon emissions – possibly up to 10 per cent of the world’s greenhouse gases.

Seeking a way to reduce the environmental harm of those processes, Singapore-based Seppure built a membrane capable of separating even the harshest chemicals at the molecular level without using heat. Built with nanotechnology, the membrane is so strong yet porous at a nano level that it can be reused multiple times, in a wide range of temperatures, and remain resistant to degradation from the chemicals with which it comes into contact.

Importantly, the membranes can be used throughout the processes of separation, from distillation to evaporation, without heat at any stage. By removing the need for high temperatures, the new membranes conserve water while also reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

Resource conservation and energy conservation are key aims in every industry. Springwise is spotting an exciting mix of initiatives that tackle these goals, from magnetic levitation for frictionless motors, to a new method for extracting lithium that recycles water and brine.  

Written by: Keely Khoury

Email: farahani@seppure.com

Website: seppure.com

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A CSR platform enables companies to choose and track verified impact projects
CategoriesSustainable News

A CSR platform enables companies to choose and track verified impact projects

Spotted:  Investors and corporates alike are increasingly interested in using software as a service (SaaS) models to integrate sustainability-focused infrastructure into corporate platforms. In line with this trend, Singaporean startup Handprint is providing businesses with an easy way to improve their planetary impact. 

The Handprint platform offers companies a choice of pre-verified impact projects grouped into themes such as social justice, clean water, and deforestation. Each company can then choose to support the ones that best align with its brand and values.  

Once a company has chosen the projects it wishes to support, software plugins integrate contributions to those projects into core business functions such as e-commerce. For example, food delivery company Saladstop integrated with Handprint’s technology to allow its customers to order ‘climate positive’ meals. Similarly, media platform Teads worked with Handprint to let its users dedicate part of their advertising spend to the regeneration project of their choice.  

The idea behind Handprint is that the company makes the contribution rather than the end consumer. But by using Handprint’s platform, companies gain benefits such as increased brand loyalty and greater cart conversion, while also linking their impact contributions to their core business. 

Handprint also makes it easy to track the company’s overall contribution – both in terms of monetary investment and impact outcomes. The progress of the company’s chosen projects can be traced with quasi-real-time data and on-the-ground photos – which the company can post on social media. 

A really important benefit of Handprint’s approach is that it significantly reduces intermediary costs on the back-end. By using blockchain technology and satellite imagery Handprint is able to avoid some of the costs normally associated with donation-based systems. As a result, more money flows to projects on the ground and less to third-party administration. In fact, the company claims to have one of the best dollar-to-impact rates in the world, being on average 68% cheaper than its competitors. 

In a crowded marketplace for corporate impact, Handprint’s credibility is boosted by its links with academia, and the financial backing it has recently received through a $2.2 million (around €2.08 million) funding round. 

Other recent software innovations aimed at corporate sustainability include a platform for measuring an organisation’s IT footprint, a SaaS platform that helps real estate investors lower their environmental impact, and a platform that simplifies ESG data. 

Written By: Katrina Lane

Website: handprint.tech

Contact: handprint.tech/contact

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Global innovation spotlight: Singapore – Springwise
CategoriesSustainable News

Global innovation spotlight: Singapore – Springwise

Global innovation spotlight: Singapore

Global Innovation Spotlight

Reflecting our global Springwise readership, we explore the innovation landscape and freshest thinking from a new country each week. This week, we’ve headed to Southeast Asia…

Singapore Innovation Facts

Global Innovation Index ranking: 8th

Climate targets: reduce GHG emissions intensity by 36% by 2030 (compared to 2005), net zero by 2050

Sustainability challenges

Dependence on food imports – Over 90 per cent of the food consumed in Singapore is imported. This not only incurs carbon emissions from transportation – it also makes the city-state vulnerable to supply problems and price hikes.

Waste management – Despite its reputation for cleanliness and investment in waste management, Singapore faces unique challenges when it comes to waste. Recycling rates are low, and more than 40 per cent of rubbish produced by the city-state is incinerated. 

Energy security – Around 95 per cent of Singapore’s domestic electricity is generated from imported natural gas. Natural gas is a fossil fuel, and Singapore’s reliance on imports makes it vulnerable to high energy prices. In response, the government recently announced targets to import around 30 per cent of the country’s electricity from low-carbon sources by 2035.

Sector specialisms

Deep tech

E-commerce

Fintech

Source: Startup Universal

Three exciting innovations from Singapore

Photo source Oyika

A BATTERY SWAP STARTUP TURNS PETROL-POWERED MOTORBIKES INTO EVS

In Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Malaysia between 83 and 87 per cent of households own motorbikes. Despite being smaller than cars, the sheer numbers of these vehicles on the road contribute to ongoing air pollution problems in many urban areas. Seeking to change that, startup Oyika has created a battery swapping service that turns petrol-powered motorbikes into electric vehicles (EVs). Read more.

Photo source Handprint

A CSR PLATFORM ENABLES COMPANIES TO CHOOSE AND TRACK VERIFIED IMPACT PROJECTS

Singaporean startup Handprint is providing businesses with an easy way to improve their planetary impact. The Handprint platform offers companies a choice of pre-verified impact projects grouped into themes such as social justice, clean water, and deforestation. Each company can then choose to support the ones that best align with its brand and values. Software tools allow client companies to integrate contributions to those projects into core business processes such as e-commerce. Read more.

Photo source Seppure

NANOFILTRATION REDUCES INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL SEPARATION EMISSIONS

An invisible polluter, industrial chemical separation is a necessity in many industries, including pharmaceuticals, oil refinement, and semiconductor and vegetable oil production. The process of separating chemicals for commercial and industrial accounts for up to 15 per cent of the world’s energy use. In response, Singapore-based Seppure has built a membrane capable of separating even the harshest chemicals at the molecular level without using heat. Read more.

Words: Matthew Hempstead

To keep up with the latest innovations, sign up to our free newsletters or email info@springwise.com to get in touch.

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A wood-based cooling foam could improve energy efficiency
CategoriesSustainable News

A wood-based cooling foam could improve energy efficiency

Spotted: As global temperatures continue to rise, the demand for air conditioning is skyrocketing. In fact, according to a recent study, the use of air conditioners is expected to quadruple by 2050. This increased demand will not only strain the world’s energy resources – it will also contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. In response, engineers in China and Germany have designed a new type of foam made from wood-based cellulose nanocrystals. 

The new foam is lightweight and reflective, meaning it can deflect solar radiation and allow heat to escape. The material is also thermally insulating. In fact, during trials the material reflected 96 per cent of sunlight and emitted over 90 per cent of the infrared radiation absorbed. If widely adopted, this technology could help to reduce the cooling energy needs of buildings by more than a third. As the world looks for ways to mitigate the effects of climate change, this foam has the potential to be a game-changer. 

When placed over an aluminum foil-lined box, the researchers found that the material was able to keep the temperature inside the box 16 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than the outside. And when the air was humid, the material kept the inside of the box 13 degrees Fahrenheit cooler. The team estimates that placing the foam on the roof and exterior walls of a building could reduce its cooling costs by up to 30 per cent. So far, the material has only been tested in small spaces. But if it can be scaled up to commercial applications, it could provide a much-needed break for our overburdened air conditioners.

The researchers believe the foam can be adapted to work in a wide range of environments, making it an ideal solution for a variety of applications.  

The study also provides an important proof of concept for the use of cellulose-based materials in thermal management, and it is hoped that this technology will eventually lead to significant reductions in energy consumption. 

Other recent heating and cooling innovations spotted by Springwise include a smart building management system that heats and cools offices as needed, a smart roof coating for better energy saving, and a window coating that blocks infrared light.

Written By: Katrina Lane

Email: kai.zhang@uni-goettingen.de

Website: pubs.acs.org

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The world’s first cell cultivated leather
CategoriesSustainable News

The world’s first cell cultivated leather

Spotted: As the world becomes increasingly aware of the ethical and environmental issues associated with traditional leather production, companies and retailers are on a mission to find high-quality leather alternatives. Lab-grown meat has received a lot of attention, with several companies’ products expected to hit the shelves in 2022 and 2023. Now, another startup is in position to scale up the production of lab-grown leather.

Vitrolabs is developing a process that can efficiently produce leather from only a few cells in an environmentally friendly way. This process involves taking a biopsy—a one-time collection of cells—from a live animal. These cells are then grown in a nutrient-rich environment – dividing and forming into tissue that can then be turned into leather. The composition of the material produced through this process achieves the complexity of traditional hides. This addresses a problem often levelled at other leather alternatives – that consumers crave the luxurious quality of real leather.

Last autumn, the company expanded into a new facility to pilot production, and as the company makes its way to commercialisation, it has received $46 million (around €43 million) in a new round of funding.

“There has been an explosion of companies that are developing alternative materials to leather,” explains VitroLabs CEO Ingvar Helgason. “At VitroLabs, our cultivated animal leather preserves the biological characteristics that the industry, craftsmen, and consumers know and love about leather, while eliminating the most environmentally and ethically detrimental aspects of the conventional leather manufacturing process associated with its sourcing.”

Many innovators are developing leather alternatives made using materials such as apples, hemp, and grape waste. However, VitroLabs is the first innovator spotted by Springwsie that is taking a lab-grown approach to sustainable leather.

Written By: Katrina Lane

Email: hello@vitrolabsinc.com

Website: vitrolabsinc.com

Reference

A Summer Home Rebuilt on the Path to Zero
CategoriesSustainable News Zero Energy Homes

A Summer Home Rebuilt on the Path to Zero

The blue cottage in a historic Chautauqua community in Lakeside, Ohio, had hosted families for nearly a century and had been the beloved summer getaway of Frank and Brenda Baker’s family for the past 15 years. So when a tree fell on their summer home in June 2009, it crushed more than just the structure. At first, the Bakers hoped to save some of the original building, but a thorough inspection determined that even the areas that didn’t take a direct hit were too compromised to be reused. That news prompted the Bakers’ plan B: to rebuild the cottage from the ground up as a model of energy efficiency and sustainable building while maintaining the character of its 100-year-old  predecessor. To that end, they hired both a designer and a builder experienced in both sustainability and historic preservation.

Frank and Brenda have christened their project “The Lakeside Green Cottage” and have engaged like-minded professionals to bring it to life. Their designer, Dennis Feltner is an advocate for eco-friendly design and plans to adapt the sustainable building principles used in this home into his future work.  Additionally, the construction contractor, Tom Dearth, is a Certified Green Builder through the National Association of Homebuilders. Partnering with the  Lakeside Association’s sustainability initiative, the Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society, the Bakers host tours of the cottage to help educate the public about the value of green renovations. “We want to show people that eco-friendly building technology and historic character can go hand-in-hand,” Frank Baker said. 

“We really think this will be an asset to the community, and perfectly aligned with the Lakeside spirit and mission, he adds. 

Sustainable Building  Measures

The Baker cottage incorporates timber frame construction, with visible posts and beams used on the first floor.  Timber trusses support the roof and create vaulted ceilings in the second-story bedrooms. They used structural insulating products for the shell of the house, incorporating structural insulating panels (SIPs), insulating concrete forms (ICFs), and flexible EPS insulation sheets. The result is a super-tight building envelope that keeps conditioned air in, vastly reducing energy use – and energy bills.

In keeping with the Baker’s sustainability goals, materials from the original cottage were reused wherever possible, including the staircase, banister, and spindles; beadboard paneling; red pine floor planks; interior doors; bathroom fixtures, and some kitchen cabinets.

Products Used

PFB® insulating building products were used throughout the Lakeside Green Cottage. The high insulating properties of the products are due to their primary component, expanded polystyrene  (EPS), a rigid foam material that has special properties due to its structure. The individual cells of low-density polystyrene make EPS extremely light and strong, able to support many times its own  weight. The individual cells prevent heat and air from moving through the EPS, making it a great insulator. 

 

Advantage ICFs were used for the foundation of the cottage. These insulated concrete forms are interlocking blocks of EPS insulation with a void in the center. Once the blocks are in place and are filled with concrete, they create a poured, insulated foundation in one step. The ICF  blocks remain in place, isolating the concrete and preventing temperature conduction from the outdoors. Plasti-Fab Durofoam flexible insulation was installed beneath the basement floor, working in concert with the ICFs to create an unbroken “envelope” below grade. The foundation walls have an R-value of 23 and the floor is R15.

 

Insulspan SIPs are an “insulation sandwich” made of two sheets of structural oriented strand board (OSB) laminated to a continuous core of expanded polystyrene insulation (EPS). The resulting panels were used for walls and roofs, allowing the structure to be erected and insulated in one step. The span of solid insulation left no room for air movement, vastly improving energy efficiency compared to traditionally framed construction methods. The vaulted ceiling had an R-value of 38. And the whole home had 1.5 Air Changes per Hour.

Structural Timbers 

Timber framing, a centuries-old construction method, uses visible timbers as the building’s structural  “skeleton.” Timber framing requires less wood than conventional construction and makes use of a renewable resource. In addition, harvesting mature, healthy trees for this purpose ensures that the CO2 the wood has absorbed stays put, rather than being released back into the atmosphere. 

Riverbend Timber Framing created the visible posts and beams that were used on the first floor, with timber trusses supporting the roof and creating vaulted ceilings in the second-story bedrooms. 

The timber was forest salvaged Douglas Fir from fire-damaged forests and thus contributed further to the sustainability of the construction.

The Home Energy Rating 

The Bakers were committed to excluding fossil fuels from their summer home. So they used electric baseboard heat, electric hot water, and an electric stove, so they no longer use natural gas in their home; and when their local grid moves to renewable energy they will be totally fossil fuel free. Because it is a summer home they initially decided that it was not cost-effective to invest in heat pump HVAC or heat pump water heating. Nonetheless, this super airtight and highly insulated 2,479 square foot home qualified for the  NAHB’s National Green Building Standard certification at the Emerald level – the program’s highest and most demanding certification, which requires a  high level of resource and energy efficiency. The original HERS rating was 68 based on projected year-round use. 

Improving the HERS Rating

Several years after the home was completed in 2010, the Bakers replaced the baseboard electric heating with heat pump mini-splits and plan to replace the standard electric water heater with a heat pump water heater. And they are planning to have their energy consultant conduct blower-door-directed air sealing to check for and remedy any air leaks that may have occurred due to settling over the last 12 years. Then they will obtain another HERS rating. They are projecting that these energy upgrades will lower their energy use significantly and they are projecting receiving a HERS rating below 50 – qualifying the home for zero energy ready status.

Zero Energy Ready

For a home to qualify as zero energy ready it must have a HERS rating of 50 or less and be capable of having all its energy needs met by renewable rooftop solar.  While the Baker’s home is designed with roof orientation, area, and slope sufficient to enable rooftop solar, adding solar panels would not be cost-effective since it is not a year-round residence. Nonetheless, the Zero Energy Ready Home status ensures that energy costs will be very low and that its operational energy use will have a minimal carbon impact. With these new ratings, the Bakers plan to continue using their home and their more recent energy-efficient upgrades to educate and inspire others to get their homes on the path to zero through the Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society (LESS) of Lakeside Chatutauqua. 

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By Frank Baker

Frank Baker is the founder of Riverbend Timber Framing and Insulspan in Blissfield, Michigan. He is a founding member and President of Team Zero, a non-profit organization committed to building consumer demand for zero energy and zero carbon homes. He is also the current president of LESS and advocates for renewable energy with his son Peter through his website lenaweesolar.com.

 

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A rooftop garden helps keep rickshaw cool
CategoriesSustainable News

A rooftop garden helps keep rickshaw cool

Spotted: There are around 95,000 registered auto-rickshaws in New Delhi. The colourful vehicles tend to blend in to the landscape. But one vehicle stands out – the rickshaw owned by Mahendra Kumar. The rickshaw driver has installed a garden on the vehicle’s roof – planted with more than 20 types of plants.

Kumar is hoping that the mobile rooftop garden will help keep the interior of his vehicle cool. In fact, he came up with the idea two years ago, during the peak of the summer season. Due to global warming, temperatures in New Delhi have been rising, at times exceeding 45 degrees Celsius, and last year saw India’s highest average maximum temperatures in 122 years. Against this backdrop, any relief would be welcome.

To create his garden, Kumar first laid a thick sack onto the rickshaw roof as a base, then added soil and seeds. He simply waters the plants from a bottle a few times a day. Not only does the garden provide a natural cooling effect, but it also gives residents a nice break from New Delhi’s ubiquitous concrete.

Indian taxi drivers are not the only ones who have converted cabs to gardens. At the height of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, when tourism in Thailand had collapsed, the Ratchapruk Taxi Cooperative in Bangkok began growing vegetables on the roofs of idled taxi cabs, and farmed frogs in piles of abandoned car tyres. The vegetables and frogs helped to feed out-of-work drivers and the surplus was sold for extra income.

As the world heats up, innovative ideas like these are going to be important in mitigating the danger. Some other ideas for mitigating the heat island effect that we have seen recently include a platform that assesses urban heat island effects and designs solutions and the use of living roofs on large buildings. 

Written By: Lisa Magloff

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Double Stud Wall Simplified – Low Cost, High Performance
CategoriesSustainable News Zero Energy Homes

Double Stud Wall Simplified – Low Cost, High Performance

Simplify

The double-stud wall is a well-established method for creating a very economical, durable, and high R-value assembly in new construction – and is one reason it’s included as one of the basic 475 Smart Enclosure System assembly types. We know pushing standard code-minimum construction toward high performance is complicated. So we’re always looking for ways to simplify – to simultaneously reduce cost while optimizing efficiency and occupant comfort. Integrated with Pro Clima air sealing and moisture control components, the double-stud wall provides unmatched economic value, safety from moisture damage, and long-lasting performance.

Go Sheathingless

With Pro Clima component integration, we’re taking it one step further. Below we illustrate a sheathingless double-stud wall (that’s right: no structural sheathing) that provides the following characteristics:

  • Minimized material costs
  • Maximized moisture drying potential
  • Removal of formaldehyde, VOC’s and other toxic chemicals commonly found in SPF, rigid foams, OSB, and plywood
  • Easily adjustable wall thickness to meet your design R-value
  • Space between walls for continuous insulation
  • Utilization of dense-pack insulation (Gutex wood THERMOFIBER, cellulose, fiberglass, mineral wool, or Havelock Wool).
  • No special materials or connections needed for the framing components
  • Fits with the typical platform framing method

You can still frame your walls on the deck and raise them into place,  but without all that sheathing they’ll be a lot lighter. With this system, you build a house out of 2x4s, fibrous insulation, SOLITEX MENTO Plus weather-resistive barrier outboard, INTELLO Plus smart vapor retarder inboard, and not much else.

The Framing

The wall consists of an inner load-bearing wall and an outer exterior finishing wall. The floor and roof loads are stacked on top of the inner wall studs. This method can allow the use 24″ o.c. advanced framing assembly if your floor and roof loads meet the design criteria. The inner wall is framed like any other stick-built wall, with the exception that the shear load is carried by 2x lumber nailed, or metal strapping mechanically fastened, diagonally, to the outside face of the inner stud wall – in the insulation cavity.

It’s important to note that each structure will have very different shear and uplift retention requirements due to variables in building height, the number of windows, local codes, shape of building, seismic requirements, etc. The outer wall is connected to the decks as outriggers, there to support the insulation and finished facade elements, and consequently, it requires minimal framing material and opening headers. In taller walls, it’s important to connect the inner and outer studs for additional strength as well as partition the bays every second bay – to make dense-packing of the double stud cavities easier to reach proper density and maintain quality control.

The Integrated Service Cavity

With this approach, the inner wall studs act as the service cavity without the need for additional strapping to support the interior finish – making it an integrated service cavity. This approach takes planning but allows for fewer steps and less material. An excellent example of this approach is demonstrated in our Project Spotlight: Vermont Integrated Architecture. Leicester, VT.

Two Air Barriers Too

To optimize the insulating value of the dense-pack insulation – airtight membranes are placed on both sides of the fibrous insulation, thereby preventing thermal bypass, as well as optimizing the drying reserves of this highly insulated wall. At the interior side is the INTELLO PLUS membrane, airtight with intelligent vapor control, making it vapor open in the summer to facilitate inward drying and vapor retarding in the winter to prevent vapor accumulation into the insulation. The INTELLO Plus is reinforced so that it substitutes for the typical mesh used in a dense-pack installation. At the exterior side is SOLITEX MENTO PLUS: airtight, waterproof, reinforced and vapor open, allowing for maximum drying potential to the outside without being restricted by an exterior sheathing, like plywood or OSB, which are Class II or low Class III vapor retarders.

Windows & Penetrations

The window is installed into a plywood box that ties together the inner and outer walls. We offer a wide selection of window air sealing tapes, but to keep it simple you need only TESCON PROFIL, or the even faster TESCON PROFECT, for the airtight connections at the interior and exterior of the window. (And don’t forget to pre-make your window corners!). At the sill heavy-duty self-sealing waterproofing is provided by EXTOSEAL ENCORS. There are multiple ways to create a thermal bridge free window installation – there are many variables depending on the window type and brand.

The most important thing is to make sure that the window is precisely connected to your interior and exterior airtight and moisture control layers. This will ensure that your installation will not have condensation due to air movement at this thermally weak intersection. Small air leakage at this connection will allow the interior winter humidity to enter the insulated cavity. Making an air-tight connection at all openings is the best way to prevent future structural damage.

Learn More

For more details and variations on this concept, download  475’s free CAD details and ebook for 475 Smart Enclosure Double-Stud Assemblies.

By 475 Building Supply

This guest blog was originally published on the 475 Building Supply blog.

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Commercial tyres made using soybeans
CategoriesSustainable News

Commercial tyres made using soybeans

Spotted: Goodyear began making tyres using a soybean oil-based rubber compound in 2017, albeit in a limited way. Now, however, the company has announced that its Metro Miler G152 and G652 transit tyres will be manufactured using a soy-based compound in place of petroleum products. The move is an important step in Goodyear’s drive to completely replace petroleum-derived oils in its tyres by 2040.

According to Goodyear, the Metro Miler tyres will also incorporate technology to enhance toughness and tread life and resist sidewall damage. This includes reinforced shoulders and steel sidewalls, along with integrated sidewall wear indicators to make it easier to spot wear from excessive scuffing. The Metro Miler tyres also include a multi-compound, scrub resistant tread designed to stand up to the rigours of use in mass transit vehicles and resist excessive wear, chunking, cracking, and chipping. 

The soybean oil will replace about 11 liquid ounces of free-flowing petroleum oil per tyre. This may not seem like a lot, especially compared to the 7 gallons of oil used to make a car tyre, but multiply that 11 ounces by a fleet of 1,600 buses – the rough number used by some major metropolitan cities in the U.S. The result could mean the use of around 20 fewer barrels of oil per city fleet.

Dustin Lancy, commercial product marketing manager for Goodyear North America, points out that, “The use of soybean oil in the majority of the Metro Miler G152 and G652 tyres in production today is a significant Goodyear innovation that reduces the amount of petroleum-based materials needed for production.” The tyres are currently in production and available for ordering.

It is not often considered, but tyres are a major polluter. From their use of petroleum-derived materials to the way they emit microplastics, it is important to find sustainable ways to manufacture tyres. Luckily, a number of innovators are working to solve this problem. Solutions range from making a natural rubber from dandelions to a rubber made from sulphur and canola oil. 

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Website: goodyeartrucktires.com

Contact: goodyeartrucktires.com/contact/contact-us

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