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Green lights: Audi at the 2021 Greentech Festival

Green lights: Audi at the 2021 Greentech Festival

By spotlighting how to develop cars for a sustainable future, Audi was once again playing an active role at 2021’s GREENTECH FESTIVAL.

Text: AUDI AG - Photo: Marc Bächtold Reading Time: 3 min

The Audi Q4 Sportback 50 e-tron quattro at the Audi booth.

Bannered “Celebrate change,” the GREENTECH FESTIVAL (GTF) was welcoming visitors to the Berlin Kraftwerk and neighbouring Heeresbäckerei events venues from June 16 to 18, 2021. The three-day event was a showcase for ideas and technologies from diverse disciplines and corners of the world.

Audi has not only served as the festival’s founding partner since 2020. The concept behind the carmaker’s 2021’s booth offered tangible evidence of how Audi is driving progress throughout a vehicle’s life cycle from the supply chain through production and use phase right up to partial recycling and also how important remaining open to cooperation is.

We’re working hard to make carbon-neutral mobility possible

Oliver Hoffmann, Member of the Board of Management for Technical Development at AUDI AG

The charging station at the center of the Audi booth, which connects to the battery in the all-electric Audi Q4 Sportback 50 e-tron quattro, was a case in point. In collaboration with several energy industry partners, Audi aims to build new wind and solar parks in mainland Europe by 2025. Together, they are expected to generate around five terawatt hours of additional electricity from renewable sources. The fruits of the carmaker’s collaboration with German utilities company RWE, a solar park in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, was the first to get underway.

 

Technology is an enabler of a sustainable future.

Henrik Wenders, Head of Brand at AUDI AG

By way of a pilot project, Audi was also demonstrating at GTF how artificial intelligence (AI) is helping to get ahead of highly complex global supply chain challenges. Since October 2020, intelligent algorithms have been analysing online reports from public media and social networks about suppliers. Also on show in Berlin were the results of research into the chemical recycling of automotive plastics that was conducted together with the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). The project aims to prove that recycling mixed plastic waste is technically feasible. Pyrolysing such waste produces an oil that can be used as a raw material for manufacturing high-quality plastic components, including airbag covers and radiator grilles which is exactly what visitors can see taking shape with the help of the 3D printer in the Audi booth.

As was the case the year before, the Audi Environmental Foundation was likewise making its presence felt at the 2021 GREENTECH FESTIVAL by highlighting projects it sponsors. One such initiative not only removes plastic waste from bodies of water, but also prevents microplastics and other contaminants from entering the water cycle in the first place. Visitors to the Audi booth could also see for themselves that the Four Rings’ initiatives and ideas were bringing about genuine change. At various points in the booth, “impact walls” detailed how each step reduced CO₂ emissions.

 
 
The rear of the Audi Q4 Sportback 50 e-tron quattro.