
California is the home of the largest existing fleet of EVs in the US. It’s also the conscience of America on treating our planet with respect.
Redwood, an obscure startup company in Carson City, Nevada led by the former Tesla chief technology officer J.B. Straubel, said today it is launching a pilot electric vehicle battery-recycling program in California, to establish a recovery system that is “efficient, safe and effective for end-of-life hybrid and electric vehicle battery packs.”
Ford Motor Company and Volvo Cars are the first automakers to directly support the program, but Redwood will accept all lithium-ion (Li-ion) and nickel metal hydride (NiMH) batteries in the state and allow other automakers to join the program. Notably absent today is Honda, which started recycling rare-earth metals from batteries a decade ago, as well as Volkswagen Group, General Motors and others. (Ford – EVs Present Environmental, Human Rights Issues) Continue reading












Honda Motor to Make Sweeping Organizational Changes in April to Survive and Sustain Itself as a Mobility Company
Honda Motor Co. today in Japan announced sweeping organizational changes on 1April 2022 that it says will “transform itself into a mobility company focused on services and solutions that can achieve new growth and new value creation.” It is trying to realize its announced target of carbon neutrality for all products and corporate activities Honda is involved in by 2050.
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Translation: The changes are needed to survive the electrification business, new business, and combined solution business, which will require bolstering the development of software, as well as the strengthening the development of core electrification technologies. Continue reading →