Bentley Continental Supersports is 85 Percent Recyclable

 Bentley Continental Supersports is 85 Percent Recyclable
Bentley Continental Supersports

At Crewe, Bentley Motors headquarters, superfast does not necessarily mean super filthy. Consider the new Continental Supersports which can also run on E85 biofuel. It has a 463kW (630hp) twin turbo 6.0 W12 engine forcing through 800Nm. The 0 - 100km/h time is 3.9 seconds. Yet for all its power and performance the supercar has been certified as 85 percent recyclable by the German Motor Transport Authority (KBA), thus becoming one of only a few luxury cars to achieve that.

"Producing the fastest Bentley was a challenge in itself," Said Dr. Arno Homburg, Head of Whole vehicle Development at Bentley Motors. "However, we were equally determined not to sacrifice any environmental aspect in pursuit of this goal. The result is the paradox that the most extreme Bentley ever, is also the greenest".

When powered by petrol, E85 biofuel or any combination of the two, the two-door coupe can reduce CO2 emissions by up to 70 percent on a well-to-wheel basis says Bentley.

"It is part of our responsibility as a car maker to contribute to environmental improvements and with Supersports you can see an evolution of this thinking. Even though Bentleys last a very long time - nearly 70% of all cars ever made are still on the road or in collections - we have still sought to ensure any environmental impact is minimised. The wide use of natural materials such as wood and leather and the craftsmanship inherent in their use naturally favours us here," Homburg concluded.

 


BENTLEY CONTINENTAL SUPERSPORTS ADDS RECYCLABILITY TO ITS GREEN CREDENTIALS

(8 December. Crewe, England) The new Continental Supersports, the first Bentley to use FlexFuel technology which enables it to run on E85 biofuel, gasoline or any combination of these two fuels, has further underlined its green credentials by meeting the 85% recyclability standard (95% for recoverability) demanded of all the Bentley Continental range.

In May 2009 Bentley received the official recycling pre-certification (in accordance with the EU Directive 2005/64/EG) from the German Motor Transport Authority (KBA) - thereby becoming one of the first luxury car manufacturers to attain this standard.

Type approval then followed from TÜV, the independent testing and certification service supplier, and now, with the addition of the Continental Supersports to this certification, the entire Bentley Continental range meets this exacting standard. The certificate, which is only awarded after detailed independent scrutiny of the car, assures the fact that virtually all the Continental's materials can be reused or reprocessed by other industries.

The Crewe-built Supercar, which is now arriving in Bentley showrooms, is the most extreme production car in the company's 90-year history. Capable of reaching 204 mph (329km/h), it is also the lightest road-going Bentley having shed some 110kg through a broad programme of weight reduction involving the innovative use of new materials such as carbon ceramics and carbon fibre.

The achievement of this certification is testament to the endeavours of the Bentley engineering team as Dr. Arno Homburg, Head of Whole vehicle Development at Bentley Motors said:

"Producing the fastest Bentley was a challenge in itself. However, we were equally determined not to sacrifice any environmental aspect in pursuit of this goal. The result is the paradox that the most extreme Bentley ever, is also the greenest".

The Supersports is the first iteration of the environmental strategy Bentley launched at the Geneva Motor Show in 2008. Powered by gasoline, E85 biofuel or any combination of these two fuels, the Supersports can reduce CO2 emissions by up to 70% on a well-to-wheel basis.

It is one element of a broader Bentley strategy which will see by 2012 the company's average fleet CO2 emissions reduced by 15% and the introduction of a new powertrain that will by itself deliver a 40% reduction in fuel consumption. This programme is also supported at the Bentley factory where the use of gas, electricity and water have all been reduced significantly despite Bentley achieving record levels of production in recent years.

A genuine two-seater, the Supersports takes Bentley into new market sectors. It has received an overwhelmingly positive media reaction and is now attracting keen customer interest. Its Flexfuel capability ensures that is fuelled for the future and, with this latest recyclability certification, customers can be assured that every effort has been taken to consider the environmental impact of all components over the entire life of the car. As Dr Homburg adds:

"It is part of our responsibility as a car maker to contribute to environmental improvements and with Supersports you can see an evolution of this thinking. Even though Bentleys last a very long time - nearly 70% of all cars ever made are still on the road or in collections - we have still sought to ensure any environmental impact is minimised. The wide use of natural materials such as wood and leather and the craftsmanship inherent in their use naturally favours us here."

 

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 Beybaba Beybaba
Who'd even want to recylce that?
December 9, 2009 3:06 pm
 joshg_5 joshg_5
When some Arab Sheik buys one, and then totals it the next week, it will most likely be scrapped -apart from the parts that may be salvageable. I'm betting on this happening more than once...
December 9, 2009 5:04 pm
 nederina nederina
That's a very nice looking Volkswagen I have to say.
December 9, 2009 3:07 pm
 CarFan56 CarFan56
Nice job VW
December 9, 2009 3:17 pm
 N20_Purge N20_Purge
So when you crash it you can make another one? I know that isn't really the case, but imagine that.
December 9, 2009 3:20 pm
 benz_man benz_man
basically, in 15 years when its in a junk-yard beside a Ford Focus they can crush and shred it and recover 85% of its resources to be re-used. Thats pretty cool. I can't think of another car that environmentally "responsible".
December 9, 2009 3:28 pm
 dbehmoaras dbehmoaras
Let's say that this car does eventually end up in a junk yard. Would the guy in charge of the junk yard recycle it or try to fix it up? I think the latter...
December 10, 2009 11:34 am
 benz_man benz_man
In 15 years with 275,000 miles, a bad transmission, worn seats and a sagging headliner I'd assume the gentleman in charge of MAKING A PROFIT would crush this and be on with it. Go to any junk-yard now and see what happens to yester-years supercars when they get old and tired. I'll give you a hint: they don't try and "fix'em up"...
December 10, 2009 3:35 pm
 radmeister radmeister
Most cars are recyclable for the most part, other than leather and wood everything else pretty much is some metal and some type of plastic.....Nothing new..
December 9, 2009 3:28 pm
 andreas350z andreas350z
85 percent recyclable?so what?it has a 6.0 w12 twin turbo engine gentlemen...it is not a green car!supercars like that should continue to exist but stop trying to convince us that you are contributing to environmental protection.
December 9, 2009 4:52 pm
 GRAVE GRAVE
The question is: when Bentley gonna replace this car? the design is old,
December 9, 2009 5:11 pm
 dbehmoaras dbehmoaras
Now that the Mulsanne is practically ready to go, we might see some mule-shots within the next year or so. I'm predicting a replacement to start selling by 2013, or 2014 at the latest unless they work on something else instead.
December 10, 2009 11:36 am
 JoshBenz JoshBenz
Wow I can't beilve you had the b@lls to say that grave, I'll agree the gt need more than horse power and new air vents and bumpers. But the arnage waited 6 or 7 years for a major up date. It's about that time.
December 9, 2009 7:13 pm
 bosaleh74 bosaleh74
i gust saw one on the high way her in Kuwait ,, its was white with black rims .. from the back its look slim and sexy .. the front say give a way pleas :)
December 10, 2009 8:55 am
 dbehmoaras dbehmoaras
Of course this makes perfect sense. Make a car that no sane human being would want to recycle, 85% recyclable. MULTIPLE FAILS!!!
December 10, 2009 11:33 am