First dandelion rubber tyres successfully pass test drive

Continental has produced a small batch of the ContiWinterContact TS 850 P, with treads made exclusively of rubber from the dandelion root, for testing.

Autocar Professional BureauBy Autocar Professional Bureau calendar 13 Sep 2016 Views icon5300 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp
First dandelion rubber tyres successfully pass test drive

Continental, the leading international tyre manufacturer, says it has made further progress in its research project for the industrialisation of dandelion rubber in tyre production.

Continental has produced a small batch of the ContiWinterContact TS 850 P, with treads made exclusively of rubber from the dandelion root, for testing. In the test drives at test sites in Arividsjaur (Swedish Lapland) and at the Contidrom (Lower Saxony), the tyres made of ‘Taraxagum’ demonstrated the properties expected by developers.

"After several years of intensive development work together with the Fraunhofer Institute, we are excited to be taking the first dandelion tyres onto the road. To get the most meaningful test results from the crop yield produced by our research project to date, we decided to build passenger car winter tyres, as they contain a particularly high proportion of natural rubber. We are continuing to pursue the goal of developing tyres based on the dandelion rubber to readiness for series production within the next five to 10 years," said Nikolai Setzer, Member of the Executive Board of Continental responsible for the Tire Division.

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Continental says the development of tyres with rubber made from the dandelion root has been very promising.
 

The development of tyres with rubber made from the dandelion root at Continental has been very promising. The company is now working with development partners on the further industrialisation of the rubber. As a result of extensive research conducted together with the Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology (IME), the Julius Kühn Institute, and the plant breeding company Aeskulap, in the past few years, good progress toward cultivating a very high-yield and robust kind of Russian dandelion has already been made.

In May 2015, Continental and the Fraunhofer received the GreenTec Award 2014 for their co-development project ‘RUBIN – Industrial Emergence of Natural Rubber from Dandelion."

The long-term goal of the research project is to find an ecologically, economically, and socially viable solution to the increasing demand for natural rubber, which would ease the pressure on the traditional rubber tree plantations in the tropics. The project also aims to reduce dependency on the sometimes severe price fluctuations of natural rubber on the commodities exchanges. In addition, cultivating dandelions on previously unused land in temperate regions of Europe – closer to Continental’s European tire plants – would sustainably reduce logistics costs and the transport-related impact on the environment.

Meanwhile, Sumitomo Rubber Industries (SRI) and US biotech company Kultevat are also developing rubber from dandelions

dandelion-web

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