Motoring

Motoring innovation: Maintenance-free and eco-friendly tyre in pipeline

Goodyear South Africa suggests looking beyond powertrains and fuel alternatives as the only solutions to reducing emissions.

A Goodyear tyre and rubber company executive promises to introduce a maintenance-free tyre comprised of 100% sustainable material by 2030.

“The discussion that has dominated the front pages has tended towards the transition from ICE [internal combustion engine] to EV or changing the fuel that the engine burns. However, it serves to remember that the average car has approximately 30 000 parts in an ICE car – from the large body panels, down to the smallest screws and nuts,” says Richard Fourie, the managing director of Goodyear South Africa.

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In 2021, the manufacturer unveiled a tyre that relied on carbon blacks produced from methane, carbon dioxide, and plant-based oils, replacing the traditional compounds widely used in tyre-making. Additional materials used in that tyre included soybean oil, rice husk ash silica, and polyester from recycled bottles.

Related: Goodyear’s New Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6 Tested at Kyalami

Goodyear
Image: Goodyear.

“And in January this year, Goodyear debuted a prototype 90% sustainable-material tyre at the Consumer Electronic Show in Las Vegas. This latest development not only sets a new standard in sustainable tyre technology, but also showed lower rolling resistance when compared to tyres made with traditional materials. Such developments, aimed at reducing the auto industry’s overall carbon footprint, are just as important in the pursuit of the greener drive.”

Related: Amended Euro 7 Regulation is Allowing Performance Engines To Live On

In 2020, Emissions Analytics, an independent global testing and data specialist in real-world emissions and fuel efficiency, released a report claiming that the pollution produced from tyre wear was significantly greater than that of exhaust emissions. Since then, tyre manufacturers such as Michelin and Goodyear have come under increased pressure to address the issue of pollution caused by the particles produced by tyre wear alongside the environmentally harmful compounds used to create tyres. Recent revisions introduced to the Euro 7 regulations now include non-exhaust emissions, specifically the particles produced by a vehicle’s brakes and tyres.

Goodyear
Image: Goodyear.

“It, therefore, stands to reason that we need to be looking into other components of mobility, beyond just powertrains and fuel types, when we work to address the topic of achieving a greener drive experience.”

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The post Sustainable Maintenance-Free Tyre By 2030 Says Goodyear Exec appeared first on CAR Magazine.

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