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Audi aims to reduce CO2 emissions by 30% over the vehicle lifecycle by 2025

Audi has set the goal of successively reducing vehicle-specific CO2 emissions by 30% by 2025 compared with reference year 2015 and over the entire product lifecycle. In the long term, Audi is pursuing the vision of CO2-neutral mobility and aims to be climate-neutral throughout the company on balance by 2050.

Audi is focusing on the electric car, which has the best carbon footprint of all drive systems in the largest markets over its entire service life. Audi opened its electric initiative with the introduction of e-tron, which has been available at dealerships since March. Before the end of this year, Audi will also present the Audi e-tron Sportback, another derivative of the series.

This will be followed by the series-produced versions of the sports car Audi e-tron GT concept, to be produced by Audi Sport GmbH, and the compact SUV Audi Q4 e-tron concept, which was presented at the Geneva Motor Show. (Earlier post.)

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Audi plans to offer 30 electrified models by 2025, 20 of which will be purely electric. The proportion of electrified vehicles will then amount to 40% of total unit sales. The brand is also continuing to develop conventional engines with a focus on universal mild hybridization and the 48-volt electrical system.

Plug-in hybrids are also an essential element of the electrification initiative. This year, Audi will launch four more PHEV models, starting with the Audi Q5 55 TFSI e quattro, which has been available since summer. (Combined fuel consumption in l/100 km: 2.4 – 2.1 (97.9 - 111.9 mpg US); electric power consumption in kWh/100 km: 19.1 – 17.5; Combined CO2 emissions in g/km: 53 – 46.)

We are committed to the Paris climate targets and will make our contribution to limiting the global temperature rise to less than 2 degrees. We want to become a leading CO2-neutral premium supplier. This clearly includes responsibility for our products throughout their lifecycles.

—Audi CEO Bram Schot

In order to achieve its self-imposed 2025 milestone, Audi has defined measures along the entire value chain that will gradually become fully effective.

As electric cars are more energy-intensive to manufacture than models with combustion engines, Audi has set itself the long-term goal of decarbonizing the supply chain.

Since the end of 2018, the company has been conducting CO2 workshops together with its suppliers to agree on effective measures. Great potential lies, for example, in the use of regenerative energies, the closing of material cycles and an increased proportion of recycled materials.

Audi demands the use of green electricity in battery-cell production from its battery-cell suppliers and fixed this in its specifications. The battery housing of the Audi e-tron is made of sustainable, certified aluminum. Audi was the first automobile manufacturer to receive the Performance Standard certificate from the Aluminum Stewardship Initiative.

Audi is also focusing on the manufacture of its products. In the future, the company intends to operate its plants on a CO2-neutral basis on balance in order to achieve the 2025 milestone. The Brussels plant is playing a pioneering role in this respect. It has been CO2-neutral since the start of production of the Audi e-tron in 2018. The biggest levers for this are the changeover to green electricity and the supply of heat from renewable energy sources. Audi Brussels has thus reduced its CO2 emissions by a total of up to 40,000 tons each year.

The next step will be the conversion of the car and engine plant in the Hungarian town of Győr. This year, the largest European solar-roof system with a peak output of 12 megawatts will be built on the roofs of Audi Hungaria’s two logistics centers, covering an area of approximately 160,000 square meters. The generation of renewable energy will start in 2020.

The solar-energy park will produce more than 9.5 gigawatt hours of energy annually, equivalent to the energy requirements of 5,000 households. Audi Hungaria already covers about 70% of its heat supply from climate-neutral, geothermal energy.

Comments

HarveyD

Better 25 years late than never.

The changes could have started in 1998 not in 2020+?

Lad

Well, don't move too fast, you might hurt yourself. By 2025, your cars better be zero emissions(EVs) or else there won't be an Audi.

mahonj

@harvey, no, not in 1998, the solar cells were way too expensive back then.
No excuse not to now, however.
Every south facing roof above a certain size should have solar panels on it.
Schools, factories, hospitals, offices.
In the case of schools, they should be paid when they are not using their own power (weekends, holidays). This could be the wholesale price + some small excess for being low co2. The same could apply to factories and offices at weekends.

HarveyD

The first Toyota Prius HEVs came out in late 2097???

mahonj

2097 - that is a secret Prius from the future, I thought you were forbidden by our lizard overlords to ever speak of it.
Even so, the one in 1997 didn't have solar panels.

HarveyD

Sorry, I met 1997/1998.

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