Ferrari
ESRS disclosure: ESRS E5 \ DR E5-1 \ Paragraph 15a
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- Does the undertaking's policy address transitioning away from the use of virgin resources, and if so, how does it incorporate the relative increase in the use of secondary (recycled) resources?
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Question Id: E5-1_01
Ferrari's policy addresses transitioning away from the use of virgin resources by recycling aluminum scraps and using secondary alloy from recycled processes. They aim to reduce the use of virgin material by focusing on secondary alloy from recycled processes and reducing quarry-derived resources. Additionally, they plan to introduce 100 percent recycled aluminum alloy for their engines by 2026, which is expected to reduce CO2 emissions by around 80 percent.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 90%
- Provide a comprehensive description of your organization's material resource inflows, as mandated by Disclosure Requirement E5-4. This should encompass products, including packaging, materials with an emphasis on critical raw materials and rare earths, water, and property, plant, and equipment utilized within your operations and throughout your upstream value chain.
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Question Id: E5-4_01
Car makers consume large amounts of raw materials, and a conscientious planning of the manufacturing process is essential to the careful management of these resources. Among the most used materials in our cars we have light elements such as aluminum, polymers, and to a lesser extent other metals (copper, titanium, platinum group, silicon, zinc, magnesium) elastomers, fluids, lithium, light rare earth elements.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 60%