DETROIT
– By purchasing Chevrolet vehicles during the next year, fleet customers will
be contributing to the automaker’s $40M clean-energy investment project.
Chevrolet’s goal is to reduce 8 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions
through various energy efficiency, renewable energy, and conservation
initiatives throughout America. Eight million metric tons is equivalent to the
emissions in 2011 from driving the 1.9 million vehicles Chevrolet is expected
to sell in the United States over the next year; a figure that includes the
brand’s anticipated fleet sales.
"This
is one more way Chevrolet is helping businesses of all kinds green their
vehicle fleets," said Brian Small, general director of GM’s fleet and
commercial operations. “When a fleet manager purchases vehicles from Chevrolet,
they know they are also contributing to a cleaner environment.”
According to
the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 8 million metric tons equals the CO2
emissions of one year of electricity use in 970,874 homes or the annual carbon
reduction from 1.7 million acres of pine forest.
Chevrolet’s
clean energy investments to be implemented in the next three to five years may
include projects such as:
·
Providing
energy efficient technology such as smart energy sensors and solar panels to
schools and other community-based facilities in need of upgrades to decrease
carbon dioxide emissions and reduce heating bills.
·
Supporting
wind farms and solar projects that deliver renewable energy to the grid and
also help family farms increase their revenues per acre.
·
Capturing
flammable methane from community landfills that delivers clean energy to the
grid and improves local air quality and safety.
·
Contributing
to forestry projects throughout America.
“This is a
good opportunity for Chevrolet to connect with its fleet customers through
clean energy projects that directly impact many of the communities in which
they operate,” added Small.
Since
1990, GM has decreased its manufacturing emissions by 60 percent. GM also has
invested hundreds of millions of dollars to build fuel-efficient vehicles like
the Chevrolet Cruze Eco, which gets an EPA-estimated 42 mpg on the highway, and
the Chevy Volt electric car with extended-range capability. The Volt allows
25-50 miles of pure electric driving on a single charge after which a small
gasoline engine/generator creates electricity for an additional 300 miles.
Chevy
will be making investments through third-party organizations such as Bonneville
Environmental Foundation, a nonprofit organization based in Portland, Ore. To
define project criteria and the program’s investment portfolio, GM has engaged
environmental experts, non-government organizations and academics through the
Climate Neutral Business Network.
For more information about Chevrolet’s clean energy investment
initiatives, visit www.chevycarbonreduction.com.
Also, for ongoing updates go to the ChevyCarbon
Twitter handle, Facebook tab Cleaner Energy or GM’s
BeyondNow blog.
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