Japan-based Denso Corp. (Kariya), Toray Industries Inc. (Tokyo), Nomura Research Institute Ltd. (Tokyo), Honda Motor Co. Ltd. (Tokyo) Matec Inc. (Hokkaido) and Rever Corp. (Osaka) announce the establishment of the BlueRebirth Council. Initiated by these six companies, the council aims to build a manufacturing and recycling integrated value chain to realize car-to-car recycling, starting with automated precision dismantling (leveraging robotics and AI-based recognition and decision-making technologies), which will efficiently disassemble end-of-life vehicles (ELVs) for material recovery and recycling.
In recent years, the automotive industry has sought to transition to a circular economy to help realize a sustainable society, taking on the significant challenge of reducing natural resource consumption by expanding the use of recycled materials. However, the mainstream global method remains shredding ELVs followed by material sorting, which the council says makes it very difficult to secure high-purity recycled materials.
Furthermore, collaboration between manufacturing and recycling industries has not been sufficient, and as a result, initiatives to use recycled materials as automotive components — which require both high quality standards and adequate supply volumes for mass production — have not progressed. In addition, the automotive recycling industry faces challenges in promoting automation and digitalization and in addressing worker shortages by improving workplace environments.
The newly established BlueRebirth Council aims to address these challenges and, looking ahead to 2035, evolve the automotive recycling industry into a “recycled materials manufacturing industry” that plays a key role as part of a new resource-circulating value chain within the automotive industry. Through these efforts, the companies behind the council are committed to realizing a true car-to-car recycling system — as in, returning all auto parts to raw materials, using them in new vehicle production and creating a closed-loop recycling system.
As specific initiatives, the council will engage in discussions and research, as well as advance technology development and demonstration projects together with participating companies, research institutions and other stakeholders, starting with the automated precision dismantling of ELVs, to build a manufacturing and recycling integrated value chain. In addition, the council will make recommendations to relevant companies and organizations.
Automated precision dismantling is an advanced intelligent system that uses AI and sensor technologies to enable robots to operate along the optimal path, even for deformed parts. This not only ensures the quality and volume of recycled materials that are difficult to achieve with conventional methods, but also contributes to fundamentally solving worker shortages.
Furthermore, by recording information such as material provenance and environmental impact on a digital platform and sharing it across the manufacturing and recycling value chain, the Rebirth Council can ensure a reliable and stable supply of recycled materials.