Business Day

Rolls-Royce’s tiny engineers buzzing

- And 15

The car production line is closed, but a 250,000strong workforce is creating a buzz at the home of the Rolls-Royce factory in Goodwood, UK. That’s because the “Rolls-Royce of honey” is being produced at the company’s apiary by British bees that have returned to their workstatio­ns, oblivious to the Covid-19 lockdown, writes Denis

Droppa in today’s MotorNews.

The car production line is closed, but a 250,000strong workforce is creating a buzz at the home of the Rolls-Royce factory in Goodwood, UK.

That’s because the “RollsRoyce of honey” is being produced at the company’s apiary by British bees that have returned to their workstatio­ns, oblivious to the Covid-19 lockdown. In their third full season of production, the dedicated workers are set to exceed their 2020 volume targets, according to Rolls-Royce.

The firm’s tiniest engineers produce their sweet fare in miniature honeycomb factories constructe­d of mathematic­ally precise hexagonal cells that echo the meticulous attention to detail practised by the luxury carmaker’s human craftsmen.

Having come through the British winter in reportedly excellent health, Rolls-Royce’s honey bees are emerging from their hives and sourcing their raw materials from the half-amillion trees, shrubs and wild flowers on the 17ha Rolls-Royce site, plus just over 3ha of sedum plants growing on the manufactur­ing plant’s “living roof ”— the largest of its kind in the UK.

The Goodwood Apiary was establishe­d in 2017 and comprises six wooden beehives, each bearing a polished stainless steel nameplate. Five are named after the cars in Rolls-Royce’s current model range — “Phantom”, “Wraith”, “Ghost”, “Dawn” and “Cullinan ”— and the sixth is named after the marque’s “Spirit of Ecstasy” mascot.

Like the 2,000 human employees at Rolls-Royce, the bees are responsibl­e for producing a rare and desirable product, according to a Rolls-Royce spokespers­on.

At the end of each season, the “Rolls-Royce of honey” is processed and served to guests of the luxury brand, including customers commission­ing their cars in the company’s Atelier suite.

The apiary project is RollsRoyce Motor Cars’ response to the threat facing Britain’s honey bee population, where a shortage of suitable forage caused by habitat loss has put their numbers under pressure in recent years.

COMMITMENT

“The apiary further underlines our commitment to the environmen­t, which informs everything we do at Goodwood,” says Richard Carter, director of global communicat­ions at Rolls-Royce Motor Cars. “Our sustainabl­e buildings, thermal ponds, rainwater management systems and wildfowl refuge have already made the Home of Rolls-Royce at Goodwood one of the UK’s most eco-friendly manufactur­ing facilities.”

 ??  ?? Left: In the grounds of the Rolls-Royce facility in Goodwood, 250,000 miniature workers are employed in honeycomb factories. Above right: The apiary project is Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ response to the threat facing Britain’s honey bee population.
Left: In the grounds of the Rolls-Royce facility in Goodwood, 250,000 miniature workers are employed in honeycomb factories. Above right: The apiary project is Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ response to the threat facing Britain’s honey bee population.
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