Dutch designer managed to make scrapyard Volvo run on plastic
- A Dutch designer made a scrapyard Volvo run on plastic
- He made a ‘de-refinery’ on the top of the vehicle
- However, some have criticized his project
Published on May 10, 2024 at 7:11 PM (UTC+4)
by Amelia Jean Hershman-Jones
Last updated on May 12, 2024 at 1:57 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Alessandro Renesis
A Dutch designer has managed to make an old Volvo run on plastic.
It simultaneously eliminates household plastic waste and powers a vehicle, talk about the proverbial two birds and one stone.
And who doesn’t have plenty of plastic sitting in their household recycling bin?
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Gijs Schalkx is a designer who had the idea to retrofit a scrapyard car to enable it to use a readily available alternative fuel, plastic waste.
But you don’t just pop used milk bottles in the tank, these everyday items are turned back into oil first.
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Schalkx dubbed the project: ‘The Plastic Car (Is Made of Metal)’.
The car in question is a clapped-out diesel Volvo 245 that he sourced from a German scrapyard.
Once the car was in place, Schalkx first repaired it to a road-legal condition.
Next, he fitted a ‘de-refinery’ on the roof complete with a reactor.
Plastic was put in the reactor and then heated in an oxygen-free environment.
It then evaporates into gas before being condensed into an oil-based fuel.
This fuel is filtered down a tube into a tank at the back of the car.
From there the car can use it as a power source.
And it worked, allowing Schalkx to drive the car for six months.
With sustainability in mind, he used only his own household waste to produce fuel – which set limits on how far he could go, Schalkx told Dezeen magazine.
To put the results into context: the Volvo 245 consumes one kilogram of plastic per seven kilometers.
It takes the refinery just over an hour to produce 12 liters of fuel.
Per Dezeen, Schalkx admitted that the car was ‘very inefficient’ because it could only cover 100 kilometers per month.
However, he claims that honesty was one of his major objectives.
While some questioned and criticized the burning of plastic in an apparent quest to be more sustainable and kinder to the environment, Schalkx clapped back.
He questioned what car manufacturers constituted as ‘sustainable design’, with his project focused on reusing and repairing available commodities instead, by increasing consumer knowledge of how things work.
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London-based Amelia cut her journalistic teeth covering all things lifestyle, wellness and luxury in the UK capital. Fast-forward a decade and the experienced content creator and editor has put pen to paper for glossy magazines, busy newsrooms and coveted brands. When her OOO is on you can find her spending quality time with her young family, in the gym or exploring the city she loves.