Business Day - Motor News

We are green because we use offsets, says Bugatti

- AFP Relaxnews

Supercar manufactur­er Bugatti, fresh off one of its best years, wants the world to know it has taken environmen­tal concerns to heart even as it prepares a next generation of heart-pounding — and gas-guzzling — speed machines.

The French automaker has implemente­d a series of measures to offset the carbon emitted by the 81 supercars it produced last year, including a shift to biogas and other green energy sources to power its manufactur­ing facilities in northeast France.

But will Bugatti, which has hinted at “surprises” this year, be joining other luxury carmakers in shifting to electric or hybrid models? The short answer: not right now.

“For the next 10 years to come, only the W16 motor provides the emotion and the passion expected by our supercar clients,” Stephan Winkelmann, the firm’s CEO, said recently in reference to its massive 16cylinder engine.

Nonetheles­s, the Volkswagen-owned brand believes it can offset its own greenhouse gas emissions as well as those of its clients, a challenge admittedly made easier by its limited production runs.

Fewer than 700 Bugattis are in circulatio­n worldwide, and on average they are driven just 1,200km a year.

That’s probably because the average Bugatti owner has a collection of 42 cars to choose from, the brand says.

“In 2018, that represente­d the equivalent of 1,380 tons of carbon dioxide emitted by Bugatti and its clients,” the firm’s MD, Christophe Piochon, told journalist­s last week.

The firm has employed a fulltime environmen­tal co-ordinator since 2016 to oversee a range of carbon-offset efforts, including buying up parcels of the Amazon rainforest to prevent them from being cleared by loggers or farmers. It has also planted 4,000 trees to help forests in its native Alsace region recover from a devastatin­g infestatio­n of bark beetles in recent years.

“Bugatti is a highly visible brand, so it s important for us to take these’ steps and set an example for the industry,” Winkelmann said.

While big business has jumped on the tree-planting bandwagon, the science underpinni­ng it is under question, and such offset schemes have been derided as greenwashi­ng that allows them to continue pumping CO2 into the atmosphere.

The car industry has come in for particular criticism as it is estimated to account for 9% of total annual greenhouse gas emissions, with a recent Greenpeace report accusing it of trying to delay fundamenta­l change towards zero-emission cars while raking in money with highly-polluting vehicles.

While the typical Bugatti buyer is no eco-warrior, “lots of them donate to environmen­tal causes, even though most people might not know it”, said Tim Bravo, the firm’s head of communicat­ions.

DELIVERIES

Green concerns certainly aren’t weighing on its business yet.

“2019 was an excellent year for Bugatti, the best since 1998 in terms of revenue, deliveries and earnings,” Winkelmann said.

Bugatti buyers are shelling out for performanc­e as well as luxury. A Chiron sells for €2.5m (R40m) before taxes. while the Divo speedster goes €5m.

Bugatti does not reveal the names of its buyers, though some have shown off their prizes on social media, such as football stars Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema, and American

boxing champion-turnedprom­oter Floyd Mayweather.

When clients come to pick up their cars at the firm’s headquarte­rs in Molsheim, they get a demonstrat­ion of what the 1,103kW cars can do from one of Bugatti’s in-house drivers.

One is France’s Pierre-Henri Raphanel, an former Formula One and 24 Hours of Le Mans driver; the other is former British racing champion Andy Wallace, who recently hit a record 490km/h in a Chiron.

As for fuel economy, “it depends on how you’re driving”, Wallace said, recounting a recent trip to pick up a journalist at the Bale-Mulhouse airport some 115km away.

“In dense traffic and driving normally, I was at 13.5l per 100km, which is pretty reasonable for a car like this,” he said.

But that’s not the figure most buyers are likely to worry about. “If you had a perfectly straight 60km road and you kept your foot down the whole way, you would empty the 100l tank in seven minutes,” Wallace said.

WHILE THE TYPICAL BUGATTI BUYER IS NO ECO-WARRIOR, LOTS OF THEM DONATE TO ENVIRONMEN­TAL CAUSES

 ??  ?? The Bugatti Chiron is no eco-warrior with its 8l 16-cylinder engine.
The Bugatti Chiron is no eco-warrior with its 8l 16-cylinder engine.

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