Jaguar Melts Pre-Production I-Paces To Make New Body Panels
Jaguar is trialing a scheme that sees aluminum taken from its old cars recycled to make components for new models.
Jaguar plots ambitious aluminum recycling programme
Jaguar is trialing a scheme that sees aluminum taken from its old cars recycled to make components for new models.
The Reality programme is part of Jaguar Land Rover’s plan to develop a ‘closed-loop’ aluminum strategy whereby the lightweight metal from old vehicles would be re-used in next-generation models. Eventually, such a scheme could see the company dramatically reduce its need for new aluminum, as well as reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
The British brand has already reduced its manufacturing operation’s CO2 output by 46 percent per vehicle produced, and although the 180,000 tonnes of aluminum it consumes every year is small fry compared with the 80 million tonnes produced, it wants to cut its use of virgin aluminum.
Aluminum recycling is nothing new. It’s one of the most widely recycled metals on the planet, with around 75 percent of all the aluminum ever made still being in circulation, and Jaguar is already heavily involved. Since 2013, the company has given around 300,000 tonnes of old metal a new lease of life in its aluminium vehicle architecture. The XE saloon, for example, uses a “significant amount” of recycled aluminum in its body structure, and the car was also the first in the world to use aluminum alloy grade RC5754, which contains up to 75 percent recycled aluminum, in its body panels.
Eventually, JLR plans to use retired fleet cars to source its aluminum, recovering, de-polluting and shredding cars on an industrial scale. This, the Tata-owned firm says, would make the use of its own recycled metal viable for the business.
Gaëlle Guillaume, lead project manager for the Reality programme at Jaguar Land Rover, said: “More than a million cars are crushed every year in the UK and this pioneering project affords us a real opportunity to give some of them a second life. Aluminum is a valuable material and a key component in our manufacturing process and as such we’re committed to ensuring our use of it is as responsible as possible.”
Source: Motor1.com
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
7 Great Used Electric SUVs: Get New EV Tech Without New Car Prices
China’s Rolls-Royce Rival May Have Found A Shortcut Into Europe
The Best EV Lease And Finance Deals In February 2026
Tesla FSD Has A Real Rival. But It Drives Very Differently
Waymo Ditched Drivers, But It’s Paying People To Close Robotaxi Doors
Hyundai’s New ‘Pleos’ Infotainment System Gets All The Right Features
Here’s Why Waymo’s Robotaxis Freaked Out During The San Francisco Outage