John Viera, Director Sustainability & Vehicle Environmental Matters at Ford.   -  Photo: Ford

John Viera, Director Sustainability & Vehicle Environmental Matters at Ford. 

Photo: Ford

John Viera, Ford's director of sustainabilityand vehicle environmental matters, will be giving the closing keynote address at this year's Green Fleet Conference and Expo.

John Viera has been at Ford for 30 years and has held quite a few different jobs, from product development to manufacturing. He has worked on the truck side of the business, and was the chief engineer for Ford’s global compact pickup program and full-size SUVs such as the Expedition and Navigator.

In 2007, John Viera took over as sustainabilty diector. From designing a lighter-weight F-150 to making wiring harnesses out of rice casings, he now oversees Ford's efforts to be green and sustainable going forward.

Interview With John Viera

Green Fleet: How have you seen the industry shift toward being green?

Viera: When I first came on board and definitely before I was in this position, I would say that the industry was more about compliance when it came to sustainability and being green. They would ask what the regulations were and if they met the regulations and simply by meeting the regulations they were being green. To be sustainable was just to meet the regulations.

Several years ago, we came to a point where the industry is doing more toward environmental actions that aren’t regulatory driven. What I like to say is that when we were regulatory driven in the past, being green was about doing less bad and we’re at a point now in the industry where we’re doing more good. We’re doing it because it’s the right thing to do, and I’m speaking for the entire industry not just Ford.

Green Fleet: Can sustainability be a good financial decision for a commercial fleet?

Viera: I think it can be a very good financial decision.

As you improve fuel economy and fuel efficiency you’re reducing the carbon dioxide coming from the tailpipe of vehicles, regardless of what you’re running on. By replacing old vehicles with more fuel efficient ones you’re having an impact there on the environment.

It’s obvious right? For fleets, a direct relationship exists around more efficient vehicles and using less fuel. I’d even make the argument that fleets often times have a better business case than personal use vehicles. They’re running more miles so if you’re buying a more efficient vehicle, the more miles you run the more savings you’re going to get faster.

Green Fleet: How can you apply that to larger commercial vehicles?

Viera: One of the things we like to talk about at Ford is the power of choice. We give our customers their choice of different powertrain options, particularly in our larger, heavier duty vehicles. We’re trying to enable our fleet customers to be more green in the vehicles they purchase by giving them choices of different types of fuels to operate on.

I think the advantage of commercial vehicles is that while the upfront cost of an alternative fuel vehicle like CNG will be more expensive, the advantage of the fleet customer is that they have the ability to pay off the investment faster because they run more miles.

The other element of alternative-fueled vehicles is the packaging of the fuel. Fuels like CNG require more package space to store that type of fuel vs gasoline or diesel and your larger vehicles typically have more ability to be able to accommodate larger storage requirements. It makes it actually more attractive in larger commercial vehicles.

Ford's Manufacturing

Green Fleet: Talk about how Ford uses recycled content for manufacturing.

Viera: The thinking from a high level concept standpoint is how do we reduce the amount of materials that we take out of the ground that take hundreds of millions of years to replenish and use materials that are either waste materials or plant grown materials that can regenerate every year? Our focus is around using those two types of materials.

Steel and aluminum are almost always recycled content. At Ford we’ve taken it to the next level as well. It's one thing to use recycled content from scrapped automobiles, but what we’re trying to push into our approach is figuring out how to use waste streams from other industries that would have been going into landfills and using it in our products.

We actually have partnered with a denim supplier where our carpet supplier gets scrap from the denim supply that would have gone to a landfill and they use that in the padding of our carpets. On our F-series we use rice casings to make sheilding for our wiring.

Green Fleet: Can you tell me about the new F-150 and what it means to have an all-aluminum truck?

Viera: The biggest impact that we could have with our prodcuts is to improve the fuel economy. When I talk about improving fuel economy, I don’t care if youre talking about gasoline, diesel, natural gas, or if you run out of gas and have to push the vehicle — if the vehicle weighs less its going to take less energy to move it.

Core to our product sustainability strategy is lightweighting. We’re doing that across the board. It’s not like we’re making a specialty sports car that’s made of aluminum as a show piece and saying, ‘Hey we have an all-aluminum sports car that we sell 5,000 units of a year, isn’t that cool.’

We have taken our biggest product, the crown jewel of our company, and said that if we’re going to be serious about sustainability, if we’re going to be really serious about fuel economy and we’re gonna walk the talk then we have to show people that with the F-150.

Green Fleet: Are there any industry trends that you think are going to be key to the future of sustainability?

Viera: I really believe in this move toward fuel efficiency and alternative-fueled vehicles like natural gas or eventually electrification. I think that’s a trend you’re going to continue to see happening. Even with heavy duty vehicles, that trends going to happen.

I think youre going to see more and more use of green vehicles in fleets. That trend's going to happen. Business customers are really interested in buying products that are more responsible. Even if you're a commercial fleet, your image as a responsible company is tied to the vehicles you’re driving and whether they as responsible as they could be as well.

Fuel Economy

Green Fleet: Is focusing on fuel economy enough or should there be a focus on reducing emissions?

Viera: I think that we’ve made a tremendous amount of progress on reducing emissions in petrol and diesel engines over the last 30-40 years, like 98% plus or some ridiculous number. That's going to continue even though we're going to be seeing smaller improvements because we have already improved so much. A lot of that is going to be driven by regulations, but I think it's good regulation that’s going to help the environmental side as well.

Editor's note: For more information on the Green Fleet Conference click here.

Originally posted on Work Truck Online

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