Volvo Cars has become the first global carmaker to make the switchover to using renewable fuels for transporting its cars and production material in shipping carriers.
The company has been working on this initiative together with its logistics service partners Maersk, Kuehne+Nagel and DB Schenker, which have from June 1, 2023 switched to renewable fuel for equivalent energy needed for all container transports done for Volvo Cars.
Every year, tens of thousands of containers of production material destined for Volvo Cars factories are carried across the world’s oceans on container ships. From now on, most of these seafaring journeys are made with renewable fuel instead of traditional fossil fuel. The fuel used is Fatty Acid Methyl Esters (FAME) and is based on renewable and sustainable sources, mainly waste cooking oil. No feedstock related to palm oil or palm oil production is used.
The Swedish carmaker states that it will achieve an immediate reduction in fossil CO2 emissions from intercontinental ocean freight by 55,000 tonnes over a year. With the use of renewable fuel, CO2 emissions are reduced by at least 84 percent, compared to fossil fuel. The reduction is equivalent to the CO2 emissions of a full truck driving around the equator about 1,200 times.
Volvo Cars will use use renewable fuel for inbound ocean container transports of production material destined for manufacturing plants based in Europe and the Americas, as well as all spare parts distribution made globally by ocean container transports.
“Renewable fuel is not the end game for removing CO2 from the world’s ocean freight needs,” said Javier Varela, our Chief Operating Officer and Deputy CEO. “Yet this initiative shows that we can act now and implement solutions that achieve significant results during the wait for long-term technological alternatives.”
“We don’t view this initiative as a competitive advantage,” added Javier. “On the contrary, we want to spark other carmakers into action as well, to increase demand for carbon efficient ocean transports and to establish renewable fuels as a mid-term solution that works. We all have a responsibility to act.”
In a statement, Volvo Cars said: “When renewable fuel is not available on a specific shipment, our renewable fuel allocation is instead used by the logistics partner for another customer’s route elsewhere, so the overall cut in fossil fuel use is kept on par with actual use in container vessels. The methodology, called mass-balancing, is third-party audited regularly. The renewable fuel itself is certified and not produced in competition with food crops. It is therefore sustainable in accordance with the EU Renewable Energy Directive.
“We’re continually exploring sustainability opportunities across all aspects of our supply chain, and across our overall business,” said Javier Varela. “Our list of initiatives keeps growing as we work towards our ambition of becoming a climate neutral company by 2040.”
Volvo Cars aims to reduce its lifecycle carbon footprint per car by 40 percent between 2018 and 2025, which requires a 25 percent reduction in operational emissions, including logistics. It is also aiming for climate-neutral manufacturing by 2025. Both these milestones are important steps toward our climate neutral ambitions.