Skip to main content
Sister Publication Links
  • Rubber News
  • European Rubber Journal
Subscribe
  • Login
  • Register
  • Subscribe
  • Current Issue
  • BEST PLACES TO WORK
  • News
    • HUMANITARIAN
    • TIRE MAKERS
    • COMMERCIAL TIRE
    • GOVERNMENT & LAW
    • MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS
    • OBITUARIES
    • OPINION
    • MID YEAR REPORT
    • SERVICE ZONE
  • ADAS
  • Data
    • DATA STORE
  • Custom
    • SPONSORED CONTENT
  • Resources
    • Events
    • DIRECTORY
    • CLASSIFIEDS
    • SHOP FLOOR
    • AWARDS
    • ASK THE EXPERT
    • LIVESTREAMS
    • WEBINARS
    • SEMA LIVESTREAMS
    • RUBBER NEWS EVENTS
    • BALANCING
    • DEMOUNTING
    • SAFETY
    • TIRE REPAIR
    • TPMS
    • TRAINING
    • VEHICLE LIFTING
    • WHEEL TORQUE
    • Best Places to Work
  • ADVERTISE
  • DIGITAL EDITION
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. News
May 30, 2018 02:00 AM

Michelin sets tire-recycling goals

Miles Moore
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Print
    Tire Business photo by Miles Moore
    Barton

    MONTREAL —  Group Michelin has set itself a pair of ambitious tire-recycling goals for the coming 30 years, pledging to have 80-percent sustainable content in its new tires by that year, company officials announced at the Movin'On advanced mobility conference.

    The French tire maker also will strive to have 100 percent of its tires recycled by 2048, Cyrille Roget, Michelin technical and innovation communications director, said.

    Mr. Roget made the announcement at the Montreal conference along with Nicolas Beaumont, Michelin senior vice president — sustainable development and mobility.

    The tire industry already starts from a high recycling rate, according to Mr.Roget.

    “Today, 70 percent of all tires are recycled,” he said. “By comparison, only 40 percent of plastics are recycled.”

    Fifty percent of recycled tires go to high-value-added products such as rubberized asphalt and shoe soles, Roget said. Michelin tires, according to the company, currently contain 28 percent sustainable material, including 26 percent bio-sourced and 2 percent recycled materials.

    But reaching a 100-percent recycling rate and 80-percent recycled content for tires is crucial to Michelin's long-range sustainability plans, he said.

    “There are two ambitions here — to change what tires become, and to change what they are made of,” he said.

    “The savings would be huge,” Mr. Roget said. “If we achieve these ambitions, we would save 33 million barrels of oil each year. That is equivalent to the entire annual oil consumption of France.”

    Michelin has many collaborators in its program to achieve its 80-percent goal and overall sustainability plan, and hopes to find more, according to Roget.

    “We seek the involvement not only of tire manufacturers, but of tire recyclers,” he said. “This is not something we can do alone.”

    Michelin began its Biobutterfly program to find sustainable materials in 2012, according to the company.

    It is working with the biomaterial research companies Axens and IFP Energies Nouvelles to create synthetic elastomers such biomass such as wood, straw, or beet, the tire maker said.

    Lehigh Technologies Inc. will also play a major role in achieving Michelin's 80-percent goal, according to Michelin.

    Tucker, Ga.-based Lehigh, which Michelin acquired in October 2017, manufactures micronized rubber powders (MRP) from recycled rubber.

    Tire Business photo by Miles Moore

    Roget

    MRP replaces oil- and rubber-based feedstocks in a wide variety of industrial and consumer applications, according to Michelin.

    These include high-performance tires, rubberized asphalt, plastics, coatings, sealants, consumer goods and construction materials, the tire maker said.

    “We're thrilled to be part of Michelin,” Lehigh CEO Alan Barton said in an interview at Movin'On.

    Michelin's goal is to have the tire industry adapt MRP as a standard product, according to Mr. Barton.

    “We're part of a new business unit at Michelin, High Technology Materials, and we fit right into the mission of that business,” he said.

    The cycle times for developing new tires are long, so the Michelin acquisition hasn't yet had much impact on Lehigh's growth, according to Mr. Barton.

    “But we're getting a lot of positive feedback,” he said. “We now have the flexibility to do what we need to do, and a great partner that is part of a well-known brand and is willing to help us do the R&D that will make it happen.”

    One of the greatest positives of the Michelin acquisition is Lehigh's new production facility in Murillo del Fruto, Spain, which will begin production this summer with an annual capacity of 10,000 tons of MRP, he said. This will be on top of the 60,000 tons of MRP produced annually in Tucker.

    Letter
    to the
    Editor

    Do you have an opinion about this story? Do you have some thoughts you'd like to share with our readers? Tire Business would love to hear from you. Email your letter to Editor Don Detore at [email protected].

    Most Popular
    1
    More winter tires may flaunt ice-grip symbol
    2
    Vietnamese energy company building S.C. retread plant
    3
    TB report: 3PMS tires vary in winter weather
    4
    Michelin takes durability to new markets with latest Tweel
    5
    Yokohama adds 'work truck' version of Geolandar LT tire
    SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS
    EMAIL ADDRESS

    Please enter a valid email address.

    Please enter your email address.

    Please verify captcha.

    Please select at least one newsletter to subscribe.

    Newsletter Center

    Staying current is easy with Tire Business delivered straight to your inbox.

    SUBSCRIBE TODAY

    Subscribe to Tire Business

    SUBSCRIBE
    Connect with Us
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • RSS

    Our Mission

    Tire Business is an award-winning publication dedicated to providing the latest news, data and insights into the tire and automotive service industries.

    Reader Services
    • Staff
    • About Us
    • Site Map
    • Industry Sites
    • Order Reprints
    • Customer Service: 877-320-1716
    Partner Sites
    • Rubber News
    • European Rubber Journal
    • Automotive News
    • Plastics News
    • Urethanes Technology
    RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • Privacy Request
    • Terms of Service
    • Media Guide
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Classified Rates
    • Digital Edition
    • Careers
    • Ad Choices Ad Choices
    Copyright © 1996-2023. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • BEST PLACES TO WORK
    • News
      • HUMANITARIAN
      • TIRE MAKERS
      • COMMERCIAL TIRE
      • GOVERNMENT & LAW
      • MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS
      • OBITUARIES
      • OPINION
      • MID YEAR REPORT
      • SERVICE ZONE
    • ADAS
    • Data
      • DATA STORE
    • Custom
      • SPONSORED CONTENT
    • Resources
      • Events
        • ASK THE EXPERT
        • LIVESTREAMS
        • WEBINARS
        • SEMA LIVESTREAMS
        • RUBBER NEWS EVENTS
      • DIRECTORY
      • CLASSIFIEDS
      • SHOP FLOOR
        • BALANCING
        • DEMOUNTING
        • SAFETY
        • TIRE REPAIR
        • TPMS
        • TRAINING
        • VEHICLE LIFTING
        • WHEEL TORQUE
      • AWARDS
        • Best Places to Work
    • ADVERTISE
    • DIGITAL EDITION