BMW recycling centre, Infiniti future, diesel dying? – the week

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BMW Group says it has been a pioneer of the circular economy in automotive engineering. It is also at the halfway point success in the Car2Car research project: efficient recycling of steel, aluminium, copper, glass and plastics. For 30 years, the BMW Group’s Recycling and Dismantling Centre (RDC) has been developing and testing processes to achieve significant advances in the recycling of parts and reusable materials. The expertise gained at the RDC is shared with a global network in the recycling industry and helps to promote the establishment of a circular economy in the automotive industry. It also feeds into the BMW Group’s product design process, ensuring that a new model’s recyclability is considered from the outset. Each year, the RDC recycles several thousand vehicles, most of which are pre-series vehicles that have been used for testing and cannot be sold to end customers. These vehicles are dismantled using a standardised process that focuses on identifying reusable series components and materials suitable for recycling.

Infiniti and beyond

Are the toughest of times finally behind Nissan’s luxury brand? Starved of fresh models, at long last things are changing. The ancient, slow-selling Q50 has just been axed – it was the sole remaining car – and the QX80, an XL-sized ladder frame 4×4, is fresh for the US 2025 model year. The big Infiniti replaces a 14 year old and still fairly competitive model with the same name. The new Y63 series Nissan Patrol (North America’s 2025 Armada), is the twin of the 2025 QX80. Same biturbo 3.5-litre V6, but only 317 kW and 700 Nm (425 HP) compared to 336 kW (450 HP) for the Infiniti. In both cases this is more power than the now discontinued 5.6-litre V8 of the old models. Surprisingly, there is neither a hybrid nor a PHEV, never mind an EV option.

Dacia and Renault future

The largest Dacia yet, as well as an electric Clio, are just two of the many forthcoming models discussed in this latest Just Auto report. Assumed to be the most profitable part of Renault Group, Dacia has some of the lowest costs of any Europe based car brand. This, thanks to manufacturing plants in central Europe and North Africa, strong brand loyalty and great value cars. People also like Dacias for their simplicity and low running costs. As the 2020s progress, Renault will accelerate the process of moving almost every Dacia model onto to a single tried and tested platform. CMF-B is many years old and was once a big-volume architecture within the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi-Lada alliance. For Dacia, it is perfect: a great basis for no-nonsense cars and SUVs which can be evolved and updated with minimal expense. The newest CMF-B model is the latest Duster. This 4.34 m long SUV comes with the choice of three powertrains.