The Commercial Appeal

Roush Fenway is 1st carbon neutral NASCAR team

- Jenna Fryer

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Roush Fenway Racing set a goal to reduce its carbon footprint even as it raced a pair of gas-guzzling cars all across the country.

The initiative started with small environmen­tally conscious measures that eventually grew into a companywid­e initiative. With support from partner Castrol, RFR became the first carbon neutral team in NASCAR.

Roush Fenway on Thursday announced its carbon neutrality certification according to the PAS 2060 standard, verified by independen­t third party ERM CVS. Roush reached the status throughout its entire organizati­on, including operations and its two race teams, for 2020.

The team will mark the achievemen­t Sunday at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway with a special paint scheme on Ryan Newman’s car. The Ford is typically a dominant green with red accents when Castrol sponsors the No. 6.

Newman’s car this week will be stark white with a grey Castrol badge and muted logos from partners that supported the initiative. It created a clean look that symbolizes the minimalist­ic path to carbon neutrality. Castrol in its sponsorshi­p negotiatio­ns with RFR mandated a contract clause that the team work to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and offset the balance.

“We’ve spent months tracking, quantifyin­g, measuring our existing carbon footprint and ways to reduce our carbon footprint,” RFR President Steve Newmark said. “There’s no doubt that we have unavoidabl­e carbon emissions in how we operate our business. When you race cars and travel around the country to do so, that will inevitably be part of our operations.

“We’re trying to show that even companies in an industry like ours can take steps to reduce overall emissions, and, our hope is that it will set an example for other teams and the racing industry.”

To become carbon neutral, RFR set a goal to recycle 90% of every race car, including oil, rubber, aluminum and carbon fiber. The organizati­on has reduced its overall waste produced to more than 100 tons over the last decade, switched to LED lighting throughout its campus, reduced energy consumptio­n costs through computer-controlled HVAC systems and installed reflective roofing membranes to reduce solar heat gain.

Rainwater runoff at its North Carolina facility is captured and contained for landscape irrigation, and idling has been prohibited on campus to reduce emissions and air pollutants. The fleet of Roush company cars is being converted to Ford electric and hybrid vehicles. Newman already has the all-electric Mustang Mach-e, the first Ford production developed from ground-up to produce a zero-emission vehicle.

“We as a society have to take notice to make an impact,” Newman said. “I’ve never been one to pride myself in driving around an electric vehicle but the reality is that makes a big impact. I’m a V8 (engine) guy with the rumble and a hot rod sounds good, looks good, and take the kids for ice cream in it – that’s me, right?

“The reality is that comes with a cost to our environmen­t and I’m aware of that more so than ever. There are things that we can all be doing better.”

Newman noted that once a week he picks up 15 gallons of trash from the road in front of his North Carolina farm. He fills 5-gallon buckets with wrappers, bottles, beer cans and bags from fast food restaurant­s and convenienc­e stores.

“It’s sad that people can be that nasty,” Newman said. “It’s a challenge and the whole message here is that you don’t have to do that. You can be efficient. You just have to be smarter.”

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