Skip advert
Advertisement

“Your next used car won’t be used, it’ll be recycled”

Editor-in-chief Steve Fowler thinks recycling is becoming big business in the motor industry

Opinion - Stellantis

The circular economy is big business. Reusing, recycling – and in fact re-anything – are all part of every car maker’s push to be seen to be carbon net zero by some time towards the end of the 2030s. Timescales differ, as does what carbon net zero actually means.

This week Stellantis opened its first Circular Economy Hub, recycling its famous Mirafiori factory in Turin for the purpose, at a cost of 40 million Euros (£34.7m).

This isn’t just being done for the greater good, it’s part of the company’s drive for its circular-economy business to bring in two billion Euros’ worth of revenue by 2030. It’s so important to the Stellantis business that CEO Carlos Tavares has put one of his high-flyers, former Stellantis UK managing director Alison Jones, in charge.

Advertisement - Article continues below

“This is our first regional hub,” Jones told me. “We will have one per region, but supported by local loops or standalone facilities. So thinking about the UK – which I do – that would be a local loop or standalone facility. We can take a single element of the four Rs and put that into one country.”

Those four Rs are Reman (for remanufacturing), Repair, Reuse and Recycle. The broad aim is for every vehicle or part to last as long as possible, with cars and parts refurbished (they missed that re!) to as good as new condition – which will help save costs and the planet. Any parts beyond saving will be properly disposed of, too.

Stellantis is not alone – Renault’s Refactory (there we go again) in Flins, France, is doing a very similar thing.

What it means for you is that your used car could well have been reconditioned (another one!) by the car maker, with upgrades to everything from bodywork to batteries to keep it fresh and to enable the car maker to sell it on for more profit. Revived (sorry, couldn’t resist) parts could make it more cost-effective to keep older cars on the roads, too. These plans are laudable, as long as they don’t mean more expensive cars and car parts for you and me.

Would you buy a recycled car? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section...

Skip advert
Advertisement

Steve Fowler has previously edited Auto Express, Carbuyer, DrivingElectric, What Car?, Autocar and What Hi-Fi? and has been writing about cars for the best part of 30 years. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power
Toyota Yaris - front (watermarked)

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power

The new Toyota Yaris will arrive by 2028, and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
5 May 2026
New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover
Freelander 8 - front

New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover

We get the scoop about a UK sales confirmation of the new joint-venture between Chery and Jaguar Land Rover
News
28 Apr 2026
New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal
Skoda Epic interior

New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal

Skoda releases images of the Epiq interior as the build up begins to the full reveal on May 19th 2026.
News
4 May 2026

Find a car with the experts