22. May 2014

Continental’s dandelion rubber wins GreenTec Award 2014

Continental’s dandelion rubber wins GreenTec Award 2014

Earlier this month, leading tire manufacturer and automotive supplier Continental became this year’s recipient of the GreenTec Award for the category Automobility. The GreenTec Awards, of which there are 14 different categories, are Europe's biggest environmental and business awards.

Continental received the recognition together with development partner Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology (IME) at the University of Münster for their co-development project "RUBIN – Industrial Emergence of Natural Rubber from Dandelion. A 60-member jury panel described the project as an “outstanding example of commitment to the environment and pioneering environmental technology”. The award ceremony was held on May 4th in Munich at the start of IFAT, the world's leading trade fair for environmental technology.

The company was pleased and proud with the recognition. According to Nikolai Setzer, member of the Executive Board of Continental and Head of Tire Division, Continental has GreenTec awardcommitted to what it sees as a very promising technology, whose full potential will fully unfold in the next few years. Stezer: “In view of increasing levels of motorization in growth markets such as Asia, we expect a major increase in demand for natural rubber in the future. We are convinced that the use of rubber from dandelion root will make our tire production considerably more efficient and sustainable.”

"In the RUBIN project, we are working to find an ecologically, economically, and socially viable solution to meet this growing demand," added Dr. Andreas Topp, Vice President Material and Process Development and Industrialization Tires at Continental. Continental and IME are currently working on the industrial use of Russian dandelion, which is said to be very rubber-rich and, unlike rubber trees, do not require a tropical climate. This undemanding plant can be cultivated in a number of temperate regions on what is known as "marginal land" that was previously unusable in terms of agriculture. Andreas Topp: "Dandelion rubber will shorten transport routes to our production sites and enable the growing global demand for rubber to be met without sacrificing more precious areas of rainforest. Both these factors will have a sustainably positive effect on the world's carbon footprint and on bio-diversity."

Project manager Dr. Carla Recker, who is in charge of materials chemistry in the Continental Tire Division, accepted the award together with Professor Dirk Prüfer of the Fraunhofer IME in Munich, noting that the award served to validate the company’s investment in the project.
"In addition to persuading the jury of the GreenTec Awards, this positive environmental impact also motivates and encourages us in our work on this long-term and challenging undertaking," she said.

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