Toyota City, Japan, October 13, 2010 Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC)
announces it plans to make vehicle liner material and other interior
surfaces from a new Ecological Plastic1 that features the world's first
use of bio-PET2. Starting with the luggage-compartment liner
in the Lexus CT200h due at the beginning of 2011, TMC plans to increase
both the number of vehicle series featuring the new material, as well as
the amount of vehicle-interior area covered by it, and intends to
introduce a vehicle model in 2011 in which Ecological Plastic will cover
80 percent of the vehicle interior.
The
epoch-making bio-PET-based Ecological Plastic developed with Toyota
Tsusho Corporation is characterized by: 1) enhanced performance
(heat-resistance, durability performance, shrink resistance) compared to
conventional bio-plastics and performance parity with petroleum-based
PET, 2) the potential to approach the cost-per-part performance of
petroleum-based plastics through volume production and 3) usability in
seats and carpeting and other interior components that require a high
level of performance unattainable by hitherto Ecological
Plastic.
Ecological Plastic has the benefit
of being more carbon neutral than conventional petroleum-based
plastics, meaning it can lessen product-life-cycle CO2 emissions; use of
it can contribute to a reduction in the use of limited petroleum
resources. TMC has been engaged in applying Ecological
Plastics to automobiles since 2000, and, in May 2003, became the first
in the world to use in a mass-production vehicle a bio-plastic made from
polyactic acid, which was introduced in the spare tire cover and floor
mats of the Japanese-market Raum small car. TMC has since
expanded its use of Ecological Plastic, achieving the world's highest
level3 of use of bio-plastics in a vehicle by using it to cover 60
percent of the exposed surfaces of interior parts in the Sai hybrid
sedan launched in December
2009.
1The collective
name of plastics developed by TMC for automobiles and that use
plant-derived material and are more heat- and shock-resistant, etc.,
than conventional
bio-plastics.
2Polyethylene terephthalate;
consists of 70% terephthalic acid and 30% monoethylene glycol, by
weight; bio-PET is made by replacing monoethylene glycol with a
biological raw material derived from sugar
cane.
3As of September 2010, according to a
TMC survey.
source:
http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/tmc-to-use-bio-pet-ecological-173305.aspx