​French tire manufacturer Michelin considers purchasing Vietnamese rice husks for production

Nov 28th at 07:50
28-11-2024 07:50:50+07:00

​French tire manufacturer Michelin considers purchasing Vietnamese rice husks for production

France-headquartered tire manufacturer Michelin is exploring the possibility of sourcing rice husks from Vietnam for production, provided the Southeast Asian country meets the necessary requirements, according to Manuel Fafian, president of Michelin East Asia and Oceania.

​French tire manufacturer Michelin considers purchasing Vietnamese rice husks for production

Michelin’s new tire products meet sustainability standards. Michelin is taking advantage of rice husks, bio sunflower oil, carbon black from waste tires, metal scrap, and natural rubber for tire production. Photo: Michelin

At a recent Asia-Pacific media event at Michelin's Talent Campus in Chon Buri, Thailand, Fafian said Michelin was buying natural rubber directly from two million farmers.

The firm wants to work directly with farmers to buy such materials to make sure that they produce the materials in the most sustainable way possible.

Manuel Fafian, president of Michelin East Asia and Oceania. Photo: Michelin

Manuel Fafian, president of Michelin East Asia and Oceania. Photo: Michelin

As part of Michelin’s pledge to produce tires containing 100-percent sustainable materials by 2050, the company plans to incorporate rice husks into its tire production as they contain 15-20 percent silica, a key tire ingredient.

Silica is normally derived from sand, but the substance is increasingly becoming scarce, while the supply of rice husks is abundant in Asia.

The Michelin leader revealed they are importing rice husks from China and considering those from Thailand.

Michelin's tires currently contain 30 percent of biomaterials. The firm commits to producing tires containing 40 percent of sustainable materials by 2030 and 100 percent by 2050. Photo: Michelin

Biomaterials make up 30 percent of a Michelin tire. The firm is committed to ensuring that sustainable materials make up 40 percent of a tire by 2030 and 100 percent by 2050. Photo: Michelin

Cyrille Roget, scientific and innovation communication director at Michelin, said using bio and recycled materials helps protect the environment and reduce the energy consumed by vehicles, thus lowering costs.

He added that another benefit is durability, saying this new technology would help produce more durable and safer tires.

Tuoi Tre News



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