Jaguar Land Rover Automotive plc, the UK’s largest car manufacturer, Thursday, said it has sealed an agreement with EDF Energy to buy all its electricity from renewable sources up to March 2020. This is contained in a statement issued in Coventry, UK based on Jaguar Land Rover’s renewables purchasing programme, which operates within a wider context of sustainability, as contained in the company’s business’s latest annual Sustainability report, released on Thursday.
Jaguar Land Rover’s electricity supply, according to the statement, is backed by Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin (REGO), meaning a proportion of EDF Energy’s renewable energy is ring-fenced specifically for the company. It added that the REGO scheme certifies the proportion of supply that comes from renewable generation – 100 per cent in Jaguar Land Rover’s case.
The Executive Director of Human Resources and Global Purchasing at Jaguar Land Rover, Ian Harnett, was quoted as saying : “Our future is low-carbon, clean and efficient. Our programme to reduce our burden on the National Grid doesn’t end here: we seek continual improvements, both in how we can reduce energy consumption further and how to minimise our carbon emissions.”
He added: “Our aim is to give our customers an assurance that the company’s electricity will come from renewable sources: those being in addition to the solar array at our Engine Manufacturing Centre in Wolverhampton, one of the largest rooftop installations in Europe.”
This is as Béatrice Bigois, Managing Director of Customers, EDF Energy, said: “EDF Energy is pleased to announce that we will continue to supply Jaguar Land Rover with 100 per cent renewable electricity for the next three years.
“Jaguar Land Rover is a valued partner of EDF Energy – we share a strong focus on sustainability and are very proud to support Britain’s biggest car maker in achieving their low-carbon ambitions.”
The Jaguar Land Rover’s renewables purchasing programme, which operates within a wider context of sustainability, is contained in the company’s business’s latest annual Sustainability report, published on Thursday.
The report shows the business achieved:
• 32 percent reduction in European fleet average tailpipe CO2 emissions (2015 compared to 2007)
• More than 38 percent reduction in energy per vehicle produced, compared to 2007 (UK manufacturing)
• Building on our research and development in electric, hybrid and conventional powertrains, we invested over £3billion in technology, design, engineering and manufacturing
• In one year alone (to April 2016) we reclaimed more than 50,000 tonnes of press shop aluminium waste – enough to make around 200,000 Jaguar XE bodyshells. Giving all that aluminium another life has also prevented more than half a million tonnes of CO2 from being released into the atmosphere.
• New buildings designed to achieve the highest standards such as the Building Research Establishment’s BREEAM ‘Excellent’ standard. BREEAM encourages designers and others to think about low carbon and act accordingly, minimising the energy demands created by a building – even before considering energy efficiency and low-carbon technologies.