Volvo’s bus plant in Borås powered solely by renewable energy
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News, Sustainability

All the energy from Volvo’s bus plabt in Borås uses comes from renewable sources, such as hydropower and biofuels, which now makes the plant one of the first bus production facilities that relies solely on renewable energy. The factory’s overall energy consumption has also been reduced by 15 per cent in just the past few years.
Since the Volvo Buses production plant in Borås now solely relies on renewable energy for its operation, it has been certified by Volvo as a “Renewable Energy Facility”. The certification was issued following several steps designed to minimise the factory’s climate footprint.
Joakim Wretman, Production Manager at the Volvo Buses Borås plant says:
“We are of course very proud that we have reduced our climate impact by only using renewable sources and all the energy we purchase is fossil-free. The electricity comes from hydropower, our district heating is provided by biofuels, and the fork-lift trucks in the factory run on electricity or HVO, which is a renewable fuel,”.
The factory in recent years has also implemented several measures that together cut energy consumption by 15 per cent.
“For instance, we have replaced conventional fluorescent bulbs with LED light fittings and the manufacturing plant’s lighting is regulated automatically so it is only active during actual production. We also ensure that no electricity-consuming equipment remains switched on when it is not needed,” adds Joakim Wretman. “We have noted immense enthusiasm on the part of all our employees, and our local partner has contributed both know-how and practical solutions.”
In order to reduce the plant’s climate footprint, cooperation is needed. Another example of this is the Borås factory’s participation in Autofreight, a project designed to reduce transportation between the Viared Logistics Park and the Port of Gothenburg. It’s a solution that already from day 1 helped cut CO2 emissions by about 30 per cent.
Reducing the climate impact of production is one of numerous aspects of Volvo Buses’ environment-enhancing work.
“We regard our products in a lifecycle perspective and work tirelessly to reduce our environmental impact at every stage, from production, to daily operation, reuse and recycling. Up-to-date examples are our ongoing projects for repurposing our electric bus batteries, which can now enjoy a second life as energy storage units in homes,” explains Andreas Carlén, Energy Efficiency & Environment Director at Volvo Buses.
For the Daily News and Energy follow The European Magazine.
Sign up to The European Newsletter
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Read it here: Asset Management Matters — new supplement out now -
Breakthroughs that change how we understand health, biology and risk: the new Science Matters supplement is out now -
The new Residence & Citizenship Planning supplement: out now -
Prague named Europe’s top student city in new comparative study -
BGG expands production footprint and backs microalgae as social media drives unprecedented boom in natural wellness -
The European Winter 2026 edition - out now -
Parliament invites cyber experts to give evidence on new UK cyber security bill -
EU sustainability rules drive digital compliance push in Uzbekistan ahead of export change -
AI boom triggers new wave of data-centre investment across Europe -
Lammy travels to Washington as UK joins America’s 250th anniversary programme -
China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s largest electric car seller -
FTSE 100 posts strongest annual gain since 2009 as London market faces IPO test -
Five of the biggest New Year’s Eve fireworks happening tonight — and where to watch them -
UK education group signs agreement to operate UN training centre network hub -
Cornwall project to open new UK test airspace for drones and autonomous aircraft -
Birding tourism market set for rapid growth through 2032, report finds -
Luxury travel market set to more than double by 2035 as older, wealthier travellers drive demand -
UK and South Korea finalise upgraded free trade agreement -
Trump lawsuit against BBC raises questions over legal pressure on European public broadcasters -
UK government sets up Women in Tech taskforce amid gender imbalance concerns -
Mycelium breakthrough shows there’s mush-room to grow in greener manufacturing -
Marriott strengthens South African portfolio with new Autograph Collection hotel in Cape Town -
Oxford to host new annual youth climate summit on UN World Environment Day -
Countdown to Davos 2026 as Switzerland gears up for the most heated talks in years -
Paribu buys CoinMENA in USD 240m deal as regional crypto markets consolidate

























