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Manufacturing

Bentley to develop sustainable and recyclable electric motors

The luxury car maker is teaming up with four other companies and a university on the project.

(Image: Bentley)

Bentley is gearing up for a three-year research study to develop sustainable and recyclable electric motors.

The Crewe -headquartered luxury car maker has said the result could see recycled rare-earth magnets used in selected ancillary motors for the first time.

The project comes after Bentley committed to offer only hybrid or electric vehicles by 2026.

The study, titled RaRE (Rare-earth Recycling for E-machines), intends to build on work completed at the University of Birmingham in devising a method of extracting magnets from waste electronics.

The project will scale up this process and repurpose the extracted magnetic material into new recyclable magnets for use within bespoke ancillary motors.

Dr Matthias Rabe, member of the board for Engineering, Bentley Motors, said: "As we accelerate our journey to electrification, offering only hybrid or electric vehicles by 2026, and full electric by 2030, it is important that we focus on every aspect of vehicle sustainability, including sustainable methods of sourcing materials and components.

"RaRE promises a step-change in electrical recyclability, providing a source of truly bespoke, low voltage motors for a number of different applications and we are confident the results will provide a basis for fully sustainable electric drives."