The photo shows a truck before remanufacturing (left) and after (right). Remanufacturing gives a truck a new lease on life.  
 -  Photo courtesy of Vehicle Reman, LLC

The photo shows a truck before remanufacturing (left) and after (right). Remanufacturing gives a truck a new lease on life. 

Photo courtesy of Vehicle Reman, LLC

Gov. Greg Abbott issued a proclamation to make April 11, 2019 Remanufacturing Day in the State of Texas. The statewide observance will coincide with Global Remanufacturing Day, which celebrates the growing economy for same-as-new remanufactured goods, from vehicles to office furniture to medical devices.

The governor issued the proclamation at the request of Vehicle Reman LLC of Tyler, Texas, a company dedicated to remanufacturing Class 1 through Class 5 pickup trucks, vans, box trucks, SUVs, and automobiles.

“We’re grateful to Gov. Abbott for helping us communicate the importance of remanufacturing,” said Greig Latham, founder and CEO of Vehicle Reman. “It is another step in promoting the cost efficiency, reliability and environmental benefits of remanufactured products.”

Remanufacturing is a comprehensive and rigorous industrial process by which previously sold, leased, used, worn, or non-functional products or parts are returned to like-new or better-than-new condition, from both a quality and performance perspective, through a controlled, reproducible and sustainable process. Remanufacturing has been recognized by leading universities, research institutions and manufacturers around the world as the highest form of recycling, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, saving energy and reclaiming end-of-life products.

Texas is home to many remanufacturing-focused companies that produce automotive components, vehicle engines, heavy construction equipment, lumber, compressors, steam turbines, computer hardware, golf equipment, and more. Vehicle Reman provides its customers with same-as-new pickup trucks and other vehicles at half the cost of buying new. Reman gives fleet owners a valuable option for getting the most out of end-of-life vehicles.

“This is a natural evolution of well-established automotive parts remanufacturing, but applied to the whole vehicle,” Latham said. “We have a proven system that remanufactures a truck, van or other vehicle back to original specifications. When customers see the same-as-new quality and remarkable savings, reman really sells itself. The main challenge for us is many fleet buyers don’t yet know about reman and what it can do.”

A typical vehicle reman candidate is a truck, SUV, van, or automobile with at least 100,000 miles and seven years in service. Vehicles up to 20 years old can undergo remanufacturing. Vehicle Reman specializes in Ford, GM and Chrysler brand vehicles. Reman vehicles are quieter, ride more smoothly and will usually achieve much better fuel economy than the pre-reman units.

The first global Reman Day was celebrated in April 2018 as a way to highlight the value of remanufactured products. Reman goods are virtually indistinguishable from similar new goods. Remanufacturing saves, on average, 85% of energy use, 86% of water use, and 85% of material use compared to new products. Remanufacturing supports 180,000 full-time jobs in the United States and produces more than $100 billion worth of goods each year.

The manufacturing economy in Texas generates more than $218 billion of the state’s annual GDP (gross domestic product) and supports about 3 million jobs. Texas manufacturing accounted for 10% of American manufacturing output in 2016, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Automotive-related manufacturing generates nearly $14 billion per year in Texas and supports more than 105,000 jobs. Texas’ automobile-related manufacturing output grew nearly 380 percent between 1997 and 2015, compared to 73% nationwide.

About the author
Staff Writer

Staff Writer

Editorial

Our team of enterprising editors brings years of experience covering the fleet industry. We offer a deep understanding of trends and the ever-evolving landscapes we cover in fleet, trucking, and transportation.  

View Bio
0 Comments