Ford's record European sales are being powered by its new efficient engines - made here in the UK.
The automaker sold over 1m vehicles across Europe and demand is increasing for its new 1.4- and 1.6-litre diesel engines, built in Dagenham, Essex, which power the Fiesta, Focus and Fusion.
The two engines emit between 113g/km and 119g/km of CO2, making them tax-efficient as well as environmentally friendly. Tim Winstanley, director of powertrain development at the plant, said engines such as these are the 'green' way forward.
He said: "Reducing emissions on the Focus diesel by just 2% has a greater impact than all the hybrids sold in the UK today."
He added that Ford's ECOnetic programme is not just about engines.
Demand for Dagenham-built low-CO2 engines has triggered a steep rise in 1.4/1.6 engine production. The plant will make 485,000 this year and 575,000 in 2009. This will push total diesel output at the factory to over 1m a year.
Dagenham also makes larger diesels for other Ford models as well as for Land_Rover and Jaguar.
Ford claimed that the installation of two wind turbines at Dagenham in 2004 avoided around 6,500 tonnes of CO2 emissions a year. A arrives in early 2009 and the building making the 1.4/1.6 engines will become 100% wind-powered.
Source: http://www.just-auto.com/article.aspx?id=95455
