Mazda researches cleaner combustion engines

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Mazda is researching ways of making the combustion engine more efficient. Picture/Supplied

Mazda is researching ways of making the combustion engine more efficient. Picture/Supplied

Mazda Motor Corporation has launched  a joint research project aimed at making internal combustion engines more efficient and reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

The Saudi Arabian Oil Company will develop a fuel with a refinery process that results in lower carbon dioxide emissions, and Mazda and Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology will research and develop a high-efficiency engine that uses the fuel.

The initiative is expected to yield technologies that effectively reduce carbon dioxide emissions on a well-to-wheel basis.

Mazda said it was working to reduce its impact on the environment in line with its “Sustainable Zoom-Zoom 2030” vision for technology development, announced in August last year.

The plan calls for the automaker to reduce overall carbon dioxide emissions on a well-to-wheel basis, considering everything from fuel extraction through to driving.

The company says it is no longer sufficient to focus solely on the tank-to-wheel phase and develop fuel efficient engines and cars that emit low levels of carbon dioxide while driving on the road.

Mazda says it hopes to contribute to the conservation of resources and preservation of the environment while offering cars that combine outstanding environmental and safety performance with true driving pleasure to wider range of customers