To be able to drive innovation, you need to know the future trends. This is the offer that ENGEL made to its customers in the automotive industry against the backdrop of trend.scaut – The automotive conference, 26 May 2009 in St. Valentin. Leading experts from OEMs and suppliers talked about the future role of plastics in the automotive industry. More than 320 guests from virtually every global player in the industry took this opportunity to talk about the latest trends.
Particularly in times of change, it is useful to switch on your headlamps and look ahead. It will be a completely new ball game, and the industry will be in a different position. Which OEMs and suppliers will be on the winning team, and which will be on the losing team? And which are the next generation technology niches that you should be looking to enter? Answers to these vital questions were provided by the keynote speaker at trend.scaut, Helmut Becker, former Chief Economist with BMW and now the Head of the Institute for Economic Analysis and Communication. This was followed by four round table discussions on the role of plastics in tomorrow's vehicles.
All four discussion groups independently concluded that plastics will play a decisive role in the car of the future, whether in the form of lightweight carbon fibre construction of structural components, PP in interiors, plastic lenses for LED applications, or technical moulding in and around the electric vehicle's batteries.
In addition to this, Shrinivas Sharangpani, who is responsible for systematic development and implementation of innovations at Tata Motors as Tata's Head of Learning Center, talked about the "Indian Approach" – the Art of Minimalism. His talk focused on the development of the "low-budget" car, the Tata Nano.
"All told trend.scaut provided a comprehensive outlook of the future plastic components in automobiles. The consensus reached between OEMs, suppliers and raw material producers in the discussion groups clearly shows the very high innovative potential but also that some solutions will not be available for another two or three automobile generations. Despite this, it is particularly important in our times to not just focus on solving existing problems, but to think about tomorrow and prepare for the future. If you ask me, I think we did a fantastic job with this event", says Dr. Peter Neumann.