Business World

Dutch students grow their own biodegrada­ble car

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strength-weight ratio to that of fiberglass and weighs only 310 kg.

But the prototype has not yet passed crash tests, because the material “will not bend like metal, but break,” said the team’s leader Noud van de Gevel.

Demands to reduce air pollution and tackle climate change have pushed auto companies towards alternativ­e designs, but most are still require a great deal of energy to make.

“Energy that is saved while driving the car is now spent during the production phase,” van de Gevel said.

The TU/Ecomotive team plans to test drive Lina later this year, once given the green light by the Netherland­s Vehicle Authority. EINDHOVEN, NETHERLAND­S — What’s made of sugar, can carry four people, and travel at 50 miles (80 km) per hour? A biodegrada­ble car, whose inventors say could be the next step in environmen­tally friendly motoring.

The lightweigh­t electric car, created by students in the Netherland­s, is made of a resin derived from sugar beets and covered with sheets of Dutch-grown flax.

“Only the wheels and suspension systems are not yet of bio-based materials,” said Yanic van Riel, one of the developers from the TU/ Ecomotive team at the Eindhoven University of Technology.

The structure of the car they have called Lina has a similar

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