PressClub United Kingdom · Article.
RE:IMAGINE: New temporary exhibition at the BMW Museum to coincide with the IAA Mobility 2021 documents the BMW Group’s path to sustainable mobility in the future.
Tue Aug 31 11:00:00 CEST 2021 Press Release
+++ Focus on transition to electromobility and circular economy. +++ Exhibition on five levels of the BMW Museum shows activities and visions for increased sustainability. +++ Pioneering spirit and development expertise as driving factors behind progress. +++ Exhibition to open ahead of the IAA Mobility 2021 on 1 September 2021 and last until January 2023. +++
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Chris Overall
BMW Group
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Author.
Chris Overall
BMW Group
Note: This press release is a 1:1 copy of the original issued
by BMW headquarters in Germany. No adaptations have been made to
cater for the UK market.
Munich. The BMW Group is currently undergoing the
most far-reaching transformation process in its more than 100-year
history, leading the company directly to the sustainable mobility of
the future. A new temporary exhibition at the BMW Museum documents how
the BMW Group is facing up to the challenges this involves, as well as
demonstrating current activities and visions geared towards
sustainable driving pleasure. Under the title “RE:IMAGINE – We’re
making BMW sustainable”, all facets of this transformation will be
highlighted, from purely electric drive systems, CO2
reduction throughout the entire vehicle lifecycle, the idea of the
circular economy and rigorous environmental standards in the supply
chain through to social sustainability in the procurement of raw
materials as well as in day-to-day working life at BMW Group sites all
over the world.
“RE:IMAGINE” will open at the BMW Museum on 1 September 2021,
providing a powerful impetus in the run-up to the IAA Mobility 2021 in
Munich, which also focuses on sustainability as a future theme. On
five levels and covering a surface area of some 1 000 square metres, a
diverse tour featuring some 30 individual stations has been installed
that present the key highlights of the automotive industry’s
realignment. Entertaining, interactive and hands-on elements convey
complex issues in way that visitors of all ages can understand. The
new temporary exhibition will be on display at the BMW Museum until
January 2023.
"RE:IMAGINE": A holistic view of the transformation
process of the BMW Group.
From the global framework
conditions to milestones from the past and present to the latest
innovations and visions for the future, the "RE:IMAGINE"
exhibition provides a holistic overview of the central role
sustainability plays for the BMW Group. Based on diverse social trends
and the pressure to act caused by climate change, visitors to the BMW
Museum learn in which fields of action - products and services,
production and value creation, employees and society - the company, as
a global pioneer in its industry, has made sustainability the basis of
its activities.
Visitors can see and experience the wide variety of areas in
which new thinking contributes to resource conservation, emission
reduction and economic and social responsibility. Visitors receive
insights into current research projects and learn about the BMW
Group's various approaches to protecting the environment, habitats and
human rights. At the relevant stations, information is provided, for
example, on the use of regeneratively generated energy in vehicle
production, transparent supply chains, efficient drive types for
different needs, the establishment of a comprehensive circular economy
and the recycling rates of current BMW and MINI models, which already
far exceed the legal requirements. The exhibition also shows how
digital services support efficient mobility and how new thinking in
vehicle development with a conscious reduction of components and
materials leads to sustainable design.
Sustainability: firmly anchored in the workforce and in the
tradition of the BMW Group.
After “BMW i – Visionary
Mobility”, the BMW Museum once again devotes itself to a current as
well as future-oriented theme in its new temporary exhibition. The
title “RE:IMAGINE” expresses the capacity of the BMW Group and its
employees to conceive and shape things in a completely new way. The
pioneering spirit, commitment and innovative spirit of the company's
employees has a key role to play in tackling the changes. In both the
development and production of automobiles, as well as in many other
areas of the company, the pursuit of sustainability is firmly anchored
in the workforce. In order to reflect this, 35 personalities from
various departments of the BMW Group are portrayed in the exhibition.
Added to this is a company tradition that is closely linked to
innovative and efficient solutions as the key to success. Even in the
very early days of the company, which was originally founded in 1916,
BMW aircraft engines were not only highly reliable but also economical
in terms of fuel consumption, too – the perfect basis for successful
long-distance flights. BMW’s first motor racing accomplishments as a
car manufacturer were also largely based on the kind of facets that
can be summarised today under the heading of sustainability. The BMW
328 dominated the action on the racetrack primarily due to its
fuel-efficient in-line 6-cylinder engine and lightweight body. This
was how it succeeded in winning the 1940 Mille Miglia endurance race –
despite being up against numerous much stronger competitors. BMW has
dedicated itself to electric mobility since the early 1970s.
Electrically powered variants of the BMW 02 were used as escort
vehicles for the marathon race at the 1972 Munich Olympics, for
instance. They were the concrete expression of the vision of
emission-free mobility and became a globally respected and still
legendary symbol for a new form of driving pleasure. In the following
year, the company appointed an environmental officer for the first time.
Via Efficient Dynamics to carbon-free premium mobility: the
BMW i3 was just the beginning.
With its Efficient
Dynamics technology package, the BMW Group created a concept back in
2007 that remains unique in the automotive industry to this day. The
continuous reduction of fuel consumption – and therefore
CO2 emissions – has gone hand in hand with a consistent
increase in driving pleasure. In addition to intelligent lightweight
construction and optimisation of aerodynamic properties, one of the
key elements is the broad portfolio of drive systems. Whether highly
efficient petrol and diesel engines that can be supplemented with
48-volt mild hybrid technology, plug-in hybrid systems that allow a
lot of day-to-day driving to be taken care of on a locally
CO2-free basis, or purely electric motors – all are based
on the principle of Efficient Dynamics. With this wide range, the BMW
Group is a global supplier of premium automobiles that meets the
diverse requirements of customers all over the world. Another option
for emission-free premium mobility is hydrogen fuel cell propulsion:
at the IAA Mobility 2021 the BMW Group presents the BMW iX5 Hydrogen,
which is fitted with this technology and will be produced next year in
a small series for testing and demonstration purposes.
With the launch of the BMW i brand and the development of the
world’s first premium automobile designed from scratch for purely
electrically powered mobility, the BMW Group has also recently taken
on a pioneering role in sustainable mobility. The BMW i3 (combined
power consumption: 16.3 – 15.3 kWh/100 km according to WLTP, 13.1 kWh/
100 km according to NEDC) has come to symbolise locally
CO2-free driving pleasure in an urban environment. With the
BMW iX3 (combined power consumption: 19.0 – 18.6 kWh/100 km according
to WLTP, 17.8 – 17.5 kWh/ 100 km according to NEDC) and the MINI
Cooper SE (combined power consumption: 17.6 – 15.2 kWh/100 km
according to WLTP, 16.9 – 14.9 kWh/ 100 km according to NEDC) as well
as the BMW iX and BMW i4 models to be available soon, the BMW Group
brands offer purely electrically powered cars in numerous vehicle
categories. In the coming years, these will be followed by fully
electric model variants of the BMW 5 Series and BMW 7 Series, the BMW
X1 and the successor to the current MINI Countryman. By 2023, the BMW
Group’s product range will include 13 fully electrically powered
models, covering 90 per cent of all vehicle segments.
CO2 emissions: the entire vehicle lifecycle in
view.
In the past, the BMW Group has always addressed
the right issues at the right time, not least when it comes to
effectively tackling climate change. The main goal here is to achieve
carbon neutrality. In 2020 the BMW Group developed its own agenda that
is even more ambitious than the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement target of
limiting global warming to below two degrees Celsius. This is why the
company is well prepared to meet the requirements of the EU’s “Fit for
55” programme, which requires CO2 emissions of new car
fleets to be reduced by 55 per cent from 2030. In the long term, the
BMW Group has set itself the goal of establishing a climate-neutral
business model across the entire value chain by 2050.
Today, every vehicle is measured by its carbon footprint. Based
on continuously increased efficiency and consistent electrification,
the BMW Group succeeded in reducing the CO2 emissions of
its brands’ vehicle fleets by 53 per cent between 1995 and 2020. But
increasing sustainability is not just about the drive. The entire
lifecycle has to be taken into account – from the procurement of raw
materials and production through to the use phase and subsequent recycling.
Optimisation of manufacturing processes has enabled the BMW
Group to reduce the energy requirement per vehicle in production by
more than a third as compared to 2006. In addition, vehicle production
at all BMW Group sites worldwide is carbon-neutral as of this year.
All BMW Group plants have been making exclusive use of green power
since 2020. Four wind turbines have been generating green electricity
at the BMW Group plant in Leipzig since 2013, while the BMW Group
plants in Munich and Dingolfing draw their electricity from regional
hydroelectric power plants. At the Chinese site of the BMW Brilliance
Automotive joint venture, at the British MINI plant in Oxford and at
the BMW Group’s newest plant in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, large-scale
solar installations contribute to generating the electric power
required for production. Energy generated from methane gas obtained
from a local landfill is used at the US BMW Group plant in
Spartanburg. In terms of the figures, the company’s administrative
offices and other properties do not emit more carbon dioxide than they absorb.
The BMW Group has set itself the goal of avoiding the emission
of more than 200 million tonnes of CO2 through consistent
optimisation in production, in the supply chain and in the use phase
of the vehicles. Emission reductions in the supply chain include
initiatives to produce aluminium using solar power,
CO2-free steel production and the use of renewable energy
in the manufacture of high-voltage batteries for electric vehicles.
For example, the BMW Group plant in Landshut recently started using
aluminium produced by means of solar energy in the desert of the
Emirate of Dubai. This means that in future 43 000 tonnes of aluminium
– around half of the annual foundry requirement at the BMW Group’s
largest component plant – will be produced on a climate-neutral basis.
What is more, only green electricity is used for the production of the
battery cells for the fifth-generation BMW eDrive technology.
The goal: ten million purely electrically powered vehicles in
the next ten years.
The BMW Group placed
electromobility at the centre of its developments at an early stage in
order to achieve a consistent reduction in CO2. Launched in
2013, the BMW i3 is the result of a holistic concept for
sustainability that goes far beyond purely electric power. This
compact e-vehicle with its pioneering design and passenger cell made
of carbon fibre-reinforced plastic (CFRP) also took on a pioneering
role in the field of intelligent lightweight construction. By the end
of 2020, more than 200 000 units of the BMW i3 had been sold worldwide.
At the same time, the BMW Group has expanded its range of
plug-in hybrid models in recent years to include almost all relevant
vehicle classes – from the compact segment, the mid-range and the BMW
X models through to the luxury performance segment. The combination of
an efficient combustion engine with an electric motor makes it
possible to take care of most day-to-day driving with zero local
emissions. The BMW Group provides incentives for electrically powered
driving based on innovative digital services such as the BMW eDrive
Zones and the globally unique BMW Points reward programme.
In Germany, almost one in four new cars of the BMW brand and
around 30 per cent of all newly registered MINI vehicles are now
fitted with an electrified drive. Worldwide, the BMW Group plans to
put a total of one million fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles
on the road by the end of 2021. The share of all-electric vehicles in
the BMW Group’s total sales is to be increased to more than 25 per
cent by 2025, reaching 50 per cent by 2030. In total, the BMW Group
aims to put around ten million fully electrically powered vehicles on
the road around the world in the course of the next ten years.
New vehicle platforms are being designed that enable the use of
fully electric drive systems as well as plug-in hybrid and hydrogen
fuel cell technology. Furthermore, the BMW New Class models to be
launched from 2025 onwards will set entirely new standards in the
areas of circularity and digitalisation as well as sustainable drive technology.
With its model range tailored to maximum driving pleasure in
urban traffic, the British brand MINI is predestined for electric
mobility. MINI took on the role of pioneer in the field of electric
mobility in the BMW Group back in 2008. With the MINI E produced in a
small series, field testing generated crucial findings on the use of a
purely electrically powered automobiles in day-to-day traffic. With
the MINI Cooper SE, the brand has now made an extremely successful
start to its all-electric future. By the beginning of the 2030s, the
MINI model range will exclusively comprise purely electrically powered vehicles.
The BMW Motorrad range also includes models for locally
emission-free mobility in urban environments. The latest example of
sustainable driving pleasure on two wheels is the all-electric BMW CE
04 scooter. With a range of up to 130 kilometres, it is suitable for
both day-to-day commuting and lengthier trips. Just like the BMW CE
04, all new BMW Motorrad models designed specifically for urban
mobility will be powered by electricity only in the future.
In addition, the BMW Group is committed to expanding the
charging infrastructure. With the public charging services BMW
Charging and MINI Charging, customers have convenient and transparent
access to one of the largest charging networks in existence,
comprising more than 200 000 charging points in Europe. In Germany
alone, the network offers more than 40 000 charging points. In
addition, the IONITY High Power Charging service can be used via BMW
Charging, enabling particularly fast charging at capacities of up to
350 kW and with a total of 2 000 charging points throughout Europe. In
cooperation with E.ON, the BMW Group is operating a network of 5 000
charging points in Germany up until the end of 2021 that supply 100
per cent green power.
The BMW Group as a pioneer in the development of the circular
economy.
When it comes to sustainability, the BMW Group
thinks far beyond emissions. With its “RE:THINK, RE:DUCE, RE:USE,
RE:CYCLE” approach, the company provides a holistic outlook on how the
use of primary raw materials for the automobile of the future can be
drastically reduced. The company is striving to achieve a circular
economy that involves as many raw materials as possible being
recycled. In view of the scarcity of resources and increasing raw
material prices, the BMW Group believes that this step will be crucial
to maintain sustainable business operations as well as being a clear
efficiency imperative.
The share of secondary materials – such as recycled steel,
plastic and aluminium – will see a marked increase the New Class
models from 2025 onwards. Under the motto “Secondary First”, later
recycling is already being taken into account in the development of
new models. Preference is given to the use of secondary materials
wherever the quality and availability of the materials allow.
A key challenge involved in today’s recycling processes is the
extraction of materials in a very pure form. For this purpose, wiring
systems have to be easy to remove prior to recycling, for instance, so
as to avoid mixing the steel with copper from the vehicle’s wiring
harness. The reduction in the number of components, material groups
and surface finishing contributes significantly to increasing
recycling rates. The use of mono-materials for the interior, such as
in the seats, is one example of the principle of circularity. The aim
is to return the greatest possible amount of material to the resource cycle.
In the development of electric motors and high-voltage batteries
for the fifth-generation BMW eDrive technology, close consideration
was given to recycling in addition to resource conservation. The
design principle of the electric motors makes it possible to do
without materials from the rare earth metal sector. This makes the BMW
Group independent of the availability of these critical raw materials.
The high-voltage batteries in current BMW and MINI models with
electrified drive systems can serve as stationary storage facilities
for a long period of time after being used in a vehicle and before
their materials can finally be re-processed for renewed use. The
high-voltage batteries of the fifth generation of BMW eDrive
technology are particularly suitable for circular re-use of raw
materials. In this case, the choice of materials and design allow a
recycling rate of up to 90 per cent. The housing of the high-voltage
battery in the BMW iX consists of some 30 per cent secondary
aluminium, while in the battery cell the proportion of secondary
material is as high as 50 per cent for nickel – an important raw
material. In addition, further development of battery cell technology
has reduced the proportion of cobalt in the cathode material to less
than ten per cent.
Remarkable progress towards a circular economy has been made in
other areas, too. At the BMW Group plants in Germany and Austria, for
example, a closed material cycle has been established for toolmaking.
Carbide tools are predominantly made of tungsten; at the BMW Group
plant in Steyr, they are used for the high-precision machining of
e-drive housings. As of recently, drilling and milling inserts are now
collected after use instead of being disposed of. The rare metal
tungsten contained in them can be processed into secondary tungsten in
powder form by means of a special method and then used for the
manufacture of new tools.
Binding environmental and social standards for the entire
supply chain.
The mobility turnaround is one of the
most radical economic upheavals ever to have taken place in the
automotive industry. It concerns not only the vehicle manufacturers
themselves but also their suppliers and partners. The BMW Group has
set itself the goal of establishing the most sustainable supply chain
in the industry.
Sustainability goals are defined for a new model during the
early stages of its development. This also includes the so-called
upstream chain of production. In the area of purchasing, the focus is
on compliance with environmental and social standards as well as
respect for human rights, protection of natural resources and
reduction of CO2 emissions. For this purpose, measures to
optimise sustainability such as the use of recycled materials and
renewable energy have been defined in dialogue with the suppliers.
Compliance with these standards is verified on site by independent
assessors. Even after a contract has been awarded, audits are carried
out on an ongoing basis.
The BMW Group ensures compliance with environmental and social
standards in the production of battery cells for the fifth-generation
BMW eDrive technology by means of controlled raw material extraction
and transparent supply chains. For example, the company buys the
quantities of cobalt needed for the high-voltage batteries itself
before making the material available to the battery cell suppliers.
The lithium required for battery cell production is also mined under
transparent conditions monitored by the BMW Group. The BMW Group
obtains the lithium used in the high-voltage batteries from so-called
hard-rock deposits in Australia and supplies it to the battery cell
manufacturers. In this way, the company ensures that environmental and
sustainability standards and human rights are observed in the
extraction and processing of cobalt and lithium.
Even though the battery cells for the fifth generation of BMW
eDrive technology do not use cobalt from the Democratic Republic of
Congo, the BMW Group is involved in a pilot project there to ensure
that the extraction of this raw material is both ecologically and
socially sustainable. Together with its supply chain partners, the
company has commissioned the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale
Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) to develop measures to improve the working and
living conditions of the miners in the micro-mining sector as well as
those of residents in the surrounding communities. In addition, the
BMW Group has commissioned two renowned American universities to carry
out a study on sustainable lithium mining in Latin America. The aim is
to investigate the impact of lithium mining on local water supply in
Latin America.
Another commitment to comprehensive sustainability on the part
of the BMW Group is its participation in an initiative to protect the
deep sea. Here the company supports the work being done by the World
Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Germany. In a joint declaration, the BMW
Group and companies from other industries commit to not using minerals
from the deep sea or financing deep-sea mining as a precautionary
measure until the consequences of deep-sea mining have undergone
comprehensive scientific investigation and adequate protection for the
deep sea can be guaranteed.
Social responsibility: shaping the transformation
together.
The BMW Group assumes social responsibility in
a variety of different ways both inside and outside the company. Its
social commitment is reflected in long-term partnerships with
institutions in the areas of sport and culture, for example. Both
up-and-coming and top-level athletes are supported in a variety of
disciplines. With more than 100 initiatives in modern and contemporary
art, classical music, jazz, sound, architecture and design over the
last 50 years, the BMW Group’s commitment to culture is firmly
established internationally.
As a corporate citizen, the BMW Group aims to efficiently
address and tackle the pressing environmental and social challenges of
our time. Through an international network of competent partners, the
company promotes sound education for children and young people as well
as an inclusive and diverse society. BMW Group employees contribute to
this through their own personal projects, too. The BMW Foundation
inspires leaders around the world to embrace their social
responsibility as set out in the UN Agenda 2030 and work as
responsible leaders for a peaceful, just and sustainable future.
As part of the transformation to consistently sustainable
mobility, the BMW Group is shaping change in close cooperation with
its employees. More than 50 000 employees have already undergone
specialised training in the field of e-mobility. In 2021, the BMW
Group will launch the biggest training offensive in the company's
history, organising courses on future-oriented subjects for some 75
000 participants. In this way, employees will be excellently qualified
to work in novel areas such as e-mobility and digitalisation. These
new qualifications are in great demand. At the BMW Group plant in
Dingolfing alone, the competence centre for e-drive production will be
expanded from the current 1 200 employees to as many as 2,000.
CO2 EMISSIONS & CONSUMPTION.
BMW i3
combined power consumption: 16.3 – 15.3 kWh/100 km according to
WLTP, 13.1 kWh/ 100 km according to NEDC
BMW iX3
combined power consumption: 19.0 – 18.6 kWh/100 km according to
WLTP, 17.8 – 17.5 kWh/ 100 km according to NEDC
MINI Cooper SE
combined power consumption: 17.6 – 15.2 kWh/100 km according to
WLTP, 16.9 – 14.9 kWh/ 100 km according to NEDC