GM and Detroit Youth Turn Chevy Volt Battery Covers into Wood Duck Homes

On Wednesday, kids from the Lasky Recreation Center in Detroit learned a little more about wood ducks and their nesting habits.

With the help of 10 environmental and facilities engineers from General Motors, the kids put the finishing touches on nesting boxes that will serve as the ducks’ home base come springtime at GM facilities across the United States. The duck nests, which are made out of scrap Chevrolet Volt battery covers, will provide a safe place for wood ducks and even screech owls to lay their eggs – a much more desirable secondary use for the covers than dumping them in a landfill.

“This is a great example of finding an alternative use for something we receive in our assembly plant every day,” said John Bradburn, manager of waste-reduction efforts for GM. “Our employees think about waste differently than most…they view it as a challenge to keep items in their use phase.”

In addition to giving the kids a worthy after-school project, it also gives a nod to the value GM places on wildlife habitats surrounding its plants and facilities.

Comments (12)

Mar 21, 2011
Dave Scott said...
Great idea.
Mar 21, 2011
General Motors said...
Thanks Dave! We thought so too ... subscribe to our feed for other cool ones like this.
Mar 21, 2011
ONEIL J GRANGER said...
WE NEED ALOT MORE OF THIS. GETTING OUR YOUTH INVOLVED, TEACHING THEM ABOUT OUR PLANET & NATURE. WHEN YOU CARE FOR SOMEONE OR SOMETHING ELSE YOU WILL VALUE YOURSELF AS WELL. BRAVO TO G.M. WELL DONE
Mar 21, 2011
400shareholder said...
Couldn't they be re-used by the battery manufacturers as well to reduce battery costs?
Mar 21, 2011
Matt Weegar said...
Build American Buy American
Mar 22, 2011
General Motors said...
@400shareholder - Actually, we are the battery manufacturer. The battery is made at our Brownstown Battery Assembly Plant. Located in Brownstown Township, Mich., it is the first lithium ion battery pack manufacturing plant in the U.S. operated by a major automaker. Here's a time-lapse video of the battery at Brownstown for some entertainment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOsCpuWcV0g To answer your question, reuse is not an option at this time, due to the very high quality requirements. Plus, many of them have been scrapped due to seal leaks or cracks in the structure. Hope this answers your question!

@Oneil and Matt - Thanks for your support!

Mar 23, 2011
Christopher said...
Why are there so many scrap battery covers already? The car is brand new on the market.
Mar 23, 2011
Christopher said...
Why are there so many scrap battery covers already? The car is brand new on the market.
Mar 23, 2011
General Motors said...
@Christopher - Actually, these covers were part of the battery's development training programs. Like with any manufacturing operation, sometimes scrap is generated, so we wanted to find a creative way to reuse them rather than putting them in a landfill. We don't anticipate many of these being generated in the future. If we do, we'll continue to find alternative usage options such as this.
Mar 24, 2011
Mark said...
Are these battery covers reusable, and if so why are we not sending them back to our battery plant for reuse?
Mar 24, 2011
Ellen said...
Mark, see March 22 post for your answer!
Nov 08, 2011
matthew said...
Love it....wonderful program

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