Volvo CE brings low carbon emission steel to serial production of its articulated haulers
29 January 2025
As part of efforts to reduce carbon emissions across every area of its business, Volvo CE is now for the first time implementing low carbon emission steel into serial production of all its articulated haulers built in Braås, Sweden. The announcement was made as part of the company’s biggest articulated hauler launch to date, delivering a new range that helps customers reduce emissions through improved product carbon emission footprint, enhanced fuel efficiency, and smart solutions.
Conventional steel is a heavy emitter—and, as one of the main components in Volvo CE’s products, critical to reducing carbon emissions. Steel makes up approximately 60% of Volvo articulated haulers’ total mass and accounts for more than 50% of the machine’s total carbon footprint in the cradle-to-gate scope.
As part of this transformation, Volvo CE was the first in the world to showcase a concept hauler built using pilot deliveries of fossil-free steel, one type of carbon emission-reduced steel, in partnership with Swedish steel manufacturer SSAB in 2021. The following year, Volvo CE became the first to hand over a construction machine built using this fossil-free steel to a customer, demonstrating the fast-tracking of innovation into real-world solutions, as companies across the value chain come together to drive change.
Now Volvo CE has entered the next phase of its continued exploration into low carbon materials by implementing low carbon emission steel into the serial production of its full range of articulated haulers in Braås, Sweden.
While the two steel alternatives are produced with close to zero fossil carbon emissions, with production powered by fossil-free electricity and biogas, the key difference is that the fossil-free version is based on iron ore, whereas the low carbon emission steel is produced using recycled steel.
In the initial phase, around 13% of the total mass of steel in all articulated haulers manufactured in Braås is now replaced with the low carbon emission steel—a number that is set to increase as availability of the low carbon material increases in collaboration with the company’s supply chain.
With this change, Volvo CE is able to reduce total CO₂ emissions by around 13,000 tons annually, or over 5%, in the cradle-to-gate scope. As an example, for an A40, this represents a reduction of nearly six tons of CO₂ emissions.
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