GE Plastics

GE Drives Full Speed Ahead with Breakthrough Material Solutions for More Fuel-Efficient Cars

BERGEN OP ZOOM, THE NETHERLANDS — Since the late 1960s, groundbreaking technologies from GE Advanced Materials have helped the automotive industry build best-selling vehicles offering world-class performance, style, safety, reduced costs, weight, and emissions. These GE technologies have also contributed to significant fuel savings for the consumer. Through science, GE has helped automotive manufacturers build lighter and more fuel-conserving vehicles.

GE is creating innovative, ecologically optimized solutions to support the global automotive industry’s work to address a range of adverse impacts on the environment and to reduce the global consumption of energy. By offering high-performance thermoplastic resins and compounds as lightweight alternatives to metals and glass, GE is assisting the industry in its drive to build/produce cars that use less fuel and have lower emissions than previous car generations.

Reducing Vehicle Weight and Fuel Consumption with GE’s High-Performance Engineering Resins

Plastics play a major role in today’s vehicles. Plastics can be found today in bumpers, fuel tanks, body panels, battery housings, instrument panels, wire, lighting, electronics, and many other automotive applications. Plastics can help reduce fuel use and emissions; according to the American Plastics Council, (APC) a vehicle’s gas mileage increases by five percent for every 10 percent taken from its weight. According to the APC, plastics in some vehicles have contributed to reducing weight by up to 700 pounds. Industry sources claim that 257 pounds, (116 kilograms) of the total weight of an average vehicle is comprised of plastics. Likewise, in a study published by the Association of Plastics Manufacturers in Europe, a car with 7.5 percent of its total weight consisting of plastics, and driven over 93,000 miles (150,000 km) during its service life would use approximately 264 US gallons (1000 liters) less fuel than a car using traditional metal and/or glass components (based on a 15 year service life). This would be a total savings of $1,250 per vehicle (based on an average price of $1.25 per liter), a common price for fuel in Europe. An estimated total of 4 billion pounds (1.8 billion kilograms) of plastic was used on automobiles worldwide in 1999, increasing to 5.1 billion pounds (2.3 billion kilograms) by 2009.

Today GE sells a significant amount of its engineering thermoplastic resins into the automotive industry in over 19 vehicle brands produced by OEMs worldwide and to well over 80% of the industry. According to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in the UK, in 1999 the global automotive industry produced 46.7 million passenger cars. By 2002 the industry was forecast to produce nearly 50 million cars and around 9 million MPVs and SUVs, and by 2005 over 52.7 million cars. Based on these statistics, advanced materials used in today’s automobiles can help save consumers nearly $4.9 billion per year in fuel. GE is aggressively investing in the expansion of its advanced materials portfolio to provide an even wider range of solutions for automotive manufacturers. GE’s continued investment will help reduce emissions to the environment, and further increase weight-out opportunities for the industry without compromising performance and safety.

Some of GE’s key applications include:

• GE glazing systems, which can lighten the automotive load by up to 50 percent by replacing glass with glazing solutions, which also offer greater parts integration, excellent aesthetics, styling and weathering performance, and reduce tooling costs.

• Fenders and tailgates incorporating NORYL GTX* resin instead of steel could be made 40 percent lighter, and provide a combined added value of styling freedom and high impact resistance.

• Under-the-hood components, such as electronic throttle bodies, can weigh up to 50 percent less when constructed from GE’s heat-resistant ULTEM* resin grades.

• GE’s brand of LNP* specialty compounds offer lightweight alternatives to metal, as well as a diversity of custom

Reader enquiries

GE Plastics
Plasticslaan 1
4600 AC Bergen op Zoom
Netherlands

Helen Vandebovenkamp
helen.vandebovenkamp@ge.com

Tel: +31 164 29 20 97
Fax: +31 164 29 10 66
Netherlands

+31 164 29 20 97

helen.vandebovenkamp@​ge.com

www.geplastics.com


Notes for editors


About GE Advanced Materials

GE Advanced Materials (www.geadvancedmaterials.com) is a world leader in providing materials solutions through engineering thermoplastics, silicon-based products and technology platforms, and fused quartz and ceramics. Among its businesses are:


• Plastics – which is a global plastics materials supplier and distributor, serving customers in a variety of industries including aerospace, appliances, automotive, building and construction, data storage and optical media, medical, electrical and electronics devices, telecommunications, computers and peripheral devices, outdoor vehicles and devices, and packaging (www.geplastics.com).


• Silicones – which includes GE Toshiba Silicones in the Pacific region and GE Bayer Silicones in Europe, offering silanes, specialty silicones, urethane additives, adhesives, sealants, resins, and elastomers for a variety of industries such as personal care, automotive, tire and rubber, construction, healthcare, electronics, household and institutional, agriculture, textiles, appliances, bedding and furnishings, foam control, and consumer (www.gesilicones.com).


• Quartz – which provides high-purity quartz and advanced ceramic materials for the semiconductor, telecommunications, lighting, electronics, personal care, water purification, and various other industries (www.gequartz.com).

GE (NYSE:GE) is a diversified technology, media, and financial services company dedicated to creating products that make life better. From aircraft engines and power generation to financial services, medical imaging, television programming, and plastics, GE operates in more than 100 countries and employs more than 300,000 people worldwide. For more information, visit the company's website at www.ge.com.

* NORYL GTX, ULTEM, LNP, and NORYL are trademarks of General Electric Company.

Related images

GE Provides Groundbreaking Solutions for More Fuel-Efficient Cars

Groundbreaking technologies from GE Advanced Materials have helped the automotive industry build best-selling vehicles offering world-class performance, style, safety, reduced costs, weight, and emissions. These GE technologies have also contributed to significant fuel savings for the consumer. Through science, GE has helped automotive manufacturers build lighter and more fuel-conserving vehicles.

 

Editorial enquiries

Anne Clement
GE Plastics, Automotive

+31 164 29 31 48

anne.clement@​ge.com

Folke Markestein
Marketing Solutions NV

+31 164 317 038

fmarkestein@​marketingsolutions.be

Jim Allison
AH&M Marketing Communications

+1 413 4482260

jallison@​ahminc.com

 

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