Automotive

Four Honda manufacturing plants earn certification for achieving energy efficiency

For the 13th consecutive year, 2 of Honda’s Ohio automobile manufacturing plants have earned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) ENERGY STAR Certification, while Honda Manufacturing of Indiana (HMIN) achieved the designation for the seventh year in a row.


Joining this accomplished group of Honda plants is a new certification for the Anna Engine Plant (AEP) in Anna, Ohio, which was able to reach 2018 ENERGY STAR status in the first year of EPA’s energy standards being set for engine plants.

EPA ENERGY STAR certification signifies that the facilities perform in the top 25 percent of similar facilities for energy efficiency and meet strict energy efficiency performance levels set by the EPA. On average, certified plants consume 35 percent less energy and contribute 35 percent fewer greenhouse gas emissions than similar operations.

The Marysville and East Liberty automobile plants of Honda of America Mfg. continued to find new and innovative ways to conserve energy in 2018, furthering the company’s efforts to reduce its carbon footprint. The 2.8 million square foot East Liberty Auto Plant (ELP), which produces the Honda CR-V and the Acura RDX and MDX sport-utility vehicles, expanded its use of LED lighting, installing more than 850 new fixtures and saving more than 1.1 million kWh of electricity.

The 4.3 million square foot Marysville Auto Plant (MAP), which produces the Honda Accord, Accord Hybrid and CR-V as well as the Acura ILX and TLX, saw improvements through the inception of a five year plan to improve energy management. The initiative started with the plant’s high-bay lighting with LED fixtures.

HMIN, which produces the Honda Insight as well as the Honda Civic and CR-V, has been ENERGY STAR certified for each of the last seven years. The plant continued on its path toward greater energy efficiency through the phased conversion to LED lighting and increasing emphasis on managing non-production energy use, along with the implementation of a compressed air leak management program.
Ohio’s AEP achieved energy savings by reducing the power needed to pressurize its compressed air system. The plant also raised the temperature of its process water system, lessening the energy used by the plant’s chillers. AEP opened in 1985 and has the capacity to manufacture 1.18 million engines per year, ranging from the turbocharged four-cylinder engines powering models like the Honda Civic, Accord and CR-V, up to the twin-turbo V6 powerplant found in the Acura NSX supercar.

ENERGY STAR was introduced by EPA in 1992 as a voluntary, market-based partnership to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through energy efficiency. Today, the ENERGY STAR label can be found on more than 60 different kinds of products as well as new homes and commercial and industrial buildings that meet strict energy-efficiency specifications set by the EPA.

Published in the May 2019 Edition

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