PressClub Nederland · Article.
BMW Group gaat voor een duurzamere batterijcel-bevoorradingsketen. Meer transparantie en concrete maatregelen voor kobaltwinning.
Tue Oct 31 10:50:53 CET 2017 Persbericht
BMW Group stelt zich ten doel de transparantie van zijn batterijcel-bevoorradingsketen te verbeteren. Eind dit jaar zal het concern informatie vrijgeven over smelterijen en landen waar ruwe materialen (waaronder Kobalt) worden gedolven. Tevens onderzoekt het concern hoe de sociale en ecologische situatie in de Democratische Republiek Congo kan worden verbeterd. Bijgaand het volledige, Engelstalige persbericht.
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Author.
Andrew Mason
BMW Group
Cobalt is one of the key components in production of electrified vehicles and is used in significant quantities in high-voltage batteries for electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids. The challenge facing companies that work with cobalt as a raw material is that risks related to environmental standards and human rights cannot be completely eliminated in cobalt mining.
Since the beginning, more than one and a half years ago, the BMW Group has been participating in the Responsible Cobalt Initiative (RCI), together with many other companies and organisations, the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. The aim of this initiative is to increase transparency and governance, and implement collective measures to overcome social and environmental risks in the cobalt supply chain.
In this context, the BMW Group has decided to take further steps:
First, the company will increase the transparency of its own cobalt supply chain by the end of the year, by releasing information on smelters and countries of origin for raw materials – even though these smelters are not direct BMW Group suppliers, but companies named as sources by BMW Group suppliers.
The BMW Group is also currently working with an independent partner on a feasibility study to explore to what extent the social and ecological situation can be sustainably improved through model mines for artisanal mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The study is specifically evaluating whether local model projects could be implemented with the potential for scalability at a later date.
Ursula Mathar, head of Sustainability and Environmental Protection at the BMW Group: “The BMW Group does not procure any cobalt itself; it only comes into contact with this raw material through the purchase of battery cells, for example. However, we are well aware that growing demand for electric vehicles also goes hand-in-hand with a responsibility for the extraction of relevant raw materials, such as cobalt. As a premium manufacturer – and in the interests of our customers – we aim to establish a transparent and sustainable supply chain that meets the highest standards.”
The BMW Group currently expects the first steps in verifying a local model project to coincide with the publication of smelters and countries of origin in December 2017.
With the measures it is taking in the battery cell supply chain, the BMW Group is emphasising its holistic approach to e-mobility — looking at all areas of the value chain in order to drive forward sustainable mobility solutions.