The Kestrel is the World's First Production-Ready Hemp Car

Amy Tokic
by Amy Tokic

You can smoke it, you can wear it, you can eat it… and now, you can drive in it. Is there anything you can’t do with hemp?

As it turns out, hemp has a long standing relationship with automakers. Did you know that in 1941, Henry Ford made a car body out of organic fibers that included hemp (we sure didn’t)? Now hemp is making a comeback as the world’s first production-ready biocomposite electric car is set to take off.

The Kestrel is a three-door hatchback, and according to Nathan Armstrong, the president of Motive Industries, Kestrel’s manufacturer, is made of a “hemp composite as strong as the fiberglass in boats, yet incredibly lightweight.”

The lightweight Kestrel tips the scales at 2,500 pounds (including the battery) and its boasts a fuel-efficiency increase of 25 to 30 percent. It’s really a cool process to make the resilient, lightweight compound – hemp stalks are combed and rolled into a mat that is infused with a polymer resin, making it as flexible as the carbon fiber used in racecars.

The price is affordable too. Since it’s cheap and fast to grow, the Kestrel comes in at around $25,000. The Kestrel is set to hit the road in 2012.

So what happens when the Kestrel finally breaks down and is no longer drivable? Would it be environmentally friendly to invite a few friends over, order a pizza and watch it go up in smoke?

[Source: Popsci]

Amy Tokic
Amy Tokic

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  • KS KS on Aug 16, 2015

    Interesting article, but the writer doesn't know the difference between hemp and marihuana. Does anyone know what happened to this car? I have't hear about it recently and it would be super cool to be able to buy one.

  • Dan bainbridge Dan bainbridge on Aug 25, 2022

    is the car on sale ??

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