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Renault partners with key suppliers for sustainability strategy

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With the Renault Emblème demonstrator car, the Renault Group recently presented its vision by 2035 of a low-carbon family vehicle. Through Emblème, Renault says it is continuing the exploratory studies initiated with the Scenic Vision concept in 2022.

The car embodies a number of innovations in sustainable tech, working with key suppliers, that Renault envisages are a pointer to current and future applications when the cost and production economics allow.

Renault maintains that transitioning from a combustion model to a 100% electric model is equivalent to reducing its CO2 emissions by around 50%. Moreover, Renault Group already incorporates an average of 30% of materials from the circular economy in its new models.

Renault’s approach is to address the entire vehicle life cycle from cradle to grave in five key areas: eco-design, selection of resources, production, use and end of life.

Developed by Ampere (Renault’s electric tech unit), Renault Emblème is a demo car reflecting this approach. A vision of a low-carbon family car from start to finish, Renault says it emits 90% fewer greenhouse gases (CO2eq) over its entire life cycle than the 2019 baseline. Renault says it embodies an innovative laboratory for the future generations of Renault brand’s vehicles.

By involving a range of industrial partners in the eco-design process, Renault says it has been able to optimise the choice and diversity of materials used for Renault Emblème from the outset. The list of partners included: AKWEL, Autoneum, ArcelorMittal, CEA (French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission), Constellium, Dicastal, Forvia, Forvia / Hella, Michelin, OPmobility, STMicroelectronics, Valeo and Verkor.

Stringent specifications set out every detail of the vehicle’s composition in order to achieve a 70% reduction in the carbon footprint of parts production: steel, aluminium, plastics, tyres, glass, electronics and so on.

More than twenty partners worked on the project with Renault and Ampere. To achieve the highest possible level of decarbonisation, each partner implemented their own innovations at their own level in pursuit of the most appropriate energy efficiency solutions involving the use of low-carbon energy as part of a circular economy approach.

Door handles - AKWEL

The "sensitive" door handles were designed under an eco-design approach. Extremely favourable for aerodynamics, their optimised design has reduced the overall weight of the finished part by 60%. Renault says the simplification of the mechanism has resulted in a reduction of 50 components, while still providing an opening activation response of 0.1 seconds.