Honda leads auto industry with 8 ENERGY STAR plants in America

MARYSVILLE – Honda’s four mass production auto plants, two transmission plants and two engine plants in the United States all have earned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ENERGY STAR Certificate for Outstanding Energy Efficiency.

Honda, demonstrating the company’s longstanding commitment to reducing carbon dioxide emissions through environmentally-friendly practices, is the only automaker to earn the EPA distinction for energy efficiency at every mass production auto plant it operates in the U.S.

Honda has been a leader in ENERGY STAR certification since the EPA began awarding the distinction to industrial plants in 2006. Honda’s U.S. manufacturing plants that earned ENERGY STAR certification for 2020 include:

• Honda Marysville Auto Plant and East Liberty Auto Plant in Ohio earned the award for the 15th consecutive year.

• Honda Manufacturing of Indiana achieved the designation for the ninth year in a row.

• Honda Manufacturing of Alabama earned its fourth award, and its engine plant was recognized for the second time.

• The Anna Engine Plant, located in Anna, garnered its third award.

• The Honda Transmission Manufacturing plant, in Russells Point, received its second Energy Star award.

• Honda Precision Parts of Georgia transmission plant earned first-time recognition.

Moreover, the Honda of Canada Mfg. auto and engine plants also earned first-time recognition in 2020 (ENERGY STAR Certification of manufacturing plants was only offered to U.S. companies prior to 2018. U.S. EPA and the Canadian Department of Natural Resources worked together to offer an ENERGY STAR certification for Canadian auto plants.).

Through the company’s Green Factory initiatives, Honda is working comprehensively to address the environmental effects of product manufacturing by reducing water use, energy use, waste and emissions. Honda has reduced the CO2 emissions intensity of automobile production in North America by 27.5% since 2010 and has cut waste to landfills from manufacturing by 93% since 2001. The company also is moving toward the use of renewable wind and solar power for the vast majority of the electricity it consumes in its manufacturing operations.

“The sustainable efforts we have implemented to promote energy-efficient practices is a business imperative at Honda,” said Joanna Bambeck, who leads Honda’s Green Factory efforts in North America. “Ten Honda facilities earning the ENERGY STAR Certificate demonstrates our commitment to create environmentally-friendly practices. Each manufacturing plant completed different environmentally-friendly projects to improve their overall energy efficiency in 2020, and we are honored to earn these awards from U.S. EPA.”

The ENERGY STAR certifications were awarded to plants in the top 25th percentile of all plants in energy efficiency. ENERGY STAR awards these certifications based on energy used per unit produced.

“Commercial buildings and industrial plants account for nearly half of America’s energy,” said Jean Lupinacci, chief of the ENERGY STAR commercial and industrial branch. “But through benchmarking performance and a strategic approach to energy management, it is possible for companies to save energy, save money, reduce greenhouse gasses and protect the environment.”

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 kinds of products as well as new homes and commercial and industrial buildings that meet strict energy-efficiency specifications set by the EPA. Over the past 20 years, American families and businesses have saved a total of nearly $450 billion on utility bills and prevented more than 3.1 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions with help from ENERGY STAR.

For more information about ENERGY STAR Certification for industrial facilities, visit energystar.gov/plants.