Car giant Ford will be teaming up with fast food giant McDonald鈥檚 to recycle coffee waste from the restaurant into vehicle parts. Ford will be taking food waste from McDonald鈥檚 and diverting it from landfill to its laboratory, where it will be engineered into bioplastics.聽The recycled materials will be used to make parts like headlamp housings and other interior and under hood components.
鈥淢cDonald鈥檚 commitment to innovation was impressive to us and matched our own forward-thinking vision and action for sustainability,鈥 said Debbie Mielewski, Ford Senior technical leader, sustainability and emerging materials research team.
She added: 鈥淭his has been a priority for Ford for more than 20 years, and this is an example of jump starting the closed-loop economy, where different industries work together and exchange materials that otherwise would be side or waste products.鈥
Every year, millions of tons of coffee chaff 鈥 the dried skin of the bean 鈥 naturally comes off during the roasting process. Together, Ford and McDonald鈥檚 can provide a new home to a significant portion of that material, Ford said. The companies found that chaff can be converted into a durable material to reinforce certain vehicle parts. By heating the chaff to high temperatures under low oxygen, mixing it with plastic and other additives and turning it into pellets, the material can be formed into various shapes.
According to Ford, using the chaff composite for these vehicle parts will help to make then around 20% lighter and require up to 25% less energy during the molding process.鈥淟ike McDonald鈥檚, Ford is committed to minimising waste and we鈥檙e always looking for innovative ways to further that goal,鈥 said Ian Olson, senior director, global sustainability, McDonald鈥檚. 鈥淏y finding a way to use coffee chaff as a resource, we are elevating how companies together can increase participation in the closed-loop economy.鈥