On the quest for performance and sustainable mobility: Polestar 3 cuts its carbon footprint to 24.7 tCO2e by reducing aluminium and battery related emissions
GOTHENBURG,
SWEDEN – 25 March 2024. Polestar creates exclusive electric performance cars that harness
minimalistic design, technological innovations, and sustainable solutions to
make the desirable choice and the right choice one and the same. As a result,
the total cradle-to-gate carbon footprint of Polestar’s first electric
performance SUV, Polestar 3, is lower than that of the smaller Polestar 2 when
it was launched in 2020 at 24.7 tCO2e versus 26.1 tCO2e.
Proof that even for large SUVs action can be taken to reduce their climate
impact.
The
majority of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions stem from the extraction and
processing of various materials, with three components – aluminium, steel, and
batteries. The Lifecycle Assessment (LCA) report for Polestar 3 shows that
material production and refining contribute 68% of its cradle-to-gate carbon
footprint of which aluminium represents 24%, iron and steel 17% and battery
module production 24%.
Our work at
Polestar aims to implement existing solutions, advocate for emerging solutions,
and actively address what is currently considered unsolvable. Existing
solutions may involve purchasing aluminum produced using renewable electricity,
emerging solutions could include steel made with renewable energy, and entirely
new solutions may relate to electronics, tires, and thermoplastics.
The
approach to meeting the ambitious cradle-to-gate target for Polestar 3 took
learnings from the carbon footprint reductions of Polestar 2. Consequently, 81%
of Polestar 3’s total aluminium mass production, the Li-ion battery cell module
production as well as anode and cathode material production use 100% renewable
electricity. By doing this, 8.5 tCO2e have been eliminated.
Manufactured
initially at Volvo Cars’ Chengdu factory in China, additional production is
slated to start in South Carolina, USA, in the middle of 2024. Both
manufacturing plants use 100% renewable electricity. A separate LCA will be
produced for cars produced in this factory.
Fredrika
Klarén, Head of Sustainability at Polestar, says: “The majority of a vehicle’s
greenhouse gas emissions stem from extracting and processing materials. As we
accelerate the adoption of electric cars, there is a lot we can do to reduce
their production-related emissions and strengthen the role of innovations and
of electric cars as a climate solution, Polestar 3 is a testament to that.”
Comprehensive
transparency about the environmental impact of the car is offered by the LCA
report. The LCA has been calculated using three different electricity
mixes and a 200,000 km lifetime distance driven. The methodology to assess the
electricity in use phase has been updated and now includes more realistic
scenarios from the IEA (International Energy Agency) which take into account
increased shares of renewables, underscoring their potential for reducing the
car’s emissions during the use phase. For the first time in any Polestar LCA,
vehicle maintenance is included in the calculations. The car’s cradle-to-grave
carbon footprint ranges between 28.5 - 44.5 tCO2e depending on the
electricity used to charge the vehicle during its lifetime.
The LCA
report, conducted in accordance with ISO 14067:2018, is the first Polestar LCA
report that has been reviewed by a third party, the global strategic,
environmental, and engineering consultancy Ricardo plc.
The
Polestar 3 LCA report can be found on polestar.com/sustainability/reports/.
The Polestar
3 Product Sustainability Declaration can be accessed at polestar.com/polestar-3/sustainability/.
Source: Polestar.
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