, Circular economy project looks to ensure clean energy solutions don’t increase landfill waste, TheCircularEconomy.com

Circular economy project looks to ensure clean energy solutions don’t increase landfill waste

, Circular economy project looks to ensure clean energy solutions don’t increase landfill waste, TheCircularEconomy.comA sustainability project, led by the University of Strathclyde’s Advanced Forming Research Centre (AFRC), part of the National Manufacturing Institute Scotland, is looking at circular solutions to ensure that the drive for electric machines doesn’t result in an increase in parts ending up in landfill.

As part of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) funded Future Electrical Machines Manufacturing (FEMM) Hub project, a more sustainable life cycle for electrical machines will be developed, with an aim to adopt a circular economy approach that loops the materials back into manufacture at the end of life.

Currently, electric machines, such as those used within electric cars, are manufactured using mostly metals and their alloys, some of which are complex in their composition or manufacturing routes, and most of which are manufactured from virgin, finite materials.

Read the full article at: www.circularonline.co.uk

, Circular economy project looks to ensure clean energy solutions don’t increase landfill waste, TheCircularEconomy.com

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