Bridgestone
Corporation announced today that it successfully built passenger tires with 100
percent of its natural rubber-containing components derived from guayule*, a
desert shrub that grows in arid regions. Built at the Bridgestone Technical
Center in Japan, the tires are particularly unique because they were constructed
using the company’s guayule natural rubber cultivated by Bridgestone at its
Biorubber Process Research Center (BPRC) in Mesa, Arizona, U.S.A.
A truly global
effort, Bridgestone built similar passenger tires at its operations in Rome,
Italy earlier this summer. In those tire builds, all of the tire’s major
natural rubber components — including the tread, sidewall and bead filler —
were replaced with natural rubber extracted from guayule grown and harvested by
Bridgestone.
Tire demand is
expected to increase in conjunction with global population growth and the
advancement of motorization in developing nations. Today, approximately 90
percent of all natural rubber is harvested from the Hevea brasiliensis rubber
tree, which is primarily grown in tropical regions of Southeast Asia. The
number one tire and rubber company in the world, Bridgestone is continuing to
invest in and advance major research and development in search of new and more
sustainable sources of natural rubber to alleviate the overconcentration of
natural rubber production in certain regions.
Natural rubber
is the primary raw material used to produce tires worldwide, and it’s consumed
in large quantities. Bridgestone’s future research endeavors will focus on optimizing
the natural rubber content in each guayule shrub, as well as evaluating
applications in a wider range of tire types and rubber compounds.
Guayule grows
in the Southwestern U.S. and Mexico, and the natural rubber made from guayule
is a plant-derived biomaterial similar to the natural rubber harvested from the
Hevea brasiliensis rubber tree. As guayule grows in arid regions, as opposed to
the tropical regions where the Hevea brasiliensis rubber tree is found, the
further development of guayule rubber is anticipated to contribute to the
diversification of natural rubber sources.
After securing
a plot of agricultural land in Eloy, Arizona, with an area of 114 hectares or
approximately 281 acres, the Bridgestone Group established a research farm to
employ advanced breeding practices and develop guayule cultivation techniques.
The Bridgestone Agro Operations Research Farm opened in September 2013. One
year later (September 2014), Bridgestone opened the BPRC and established,
in-house, all processes necessary for developing guayule natural rubber for use
in tire applications, including research and development, experimental
production, and manufacturing.
The Bridgestone
Group will continue its research activities with guayule and various other raw
materials with the aim of achieving its long-term environmental vision of
shifting towards 100 percent sustainable materials in tires by 2050.
to see more visit: http://www.bridgestoneamericas.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2015/-from-seed-to-tread--bridgestone-reveals-first-tires-made-entire#sthash.kK0m3KCY.dpuf
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