For the second year in a row, Vauxhall Commercial
Vehicles has carried home the title of ‘LCV Manufacturer of the Year’ in
the annual Green Fleet Awards.
The prize ceremony, hosted in central London,
recognises vehicle manufacturers, suppliers and related industries that
have made significant contributions towards reducing their carbon output
and furthering their commitment to sustainable transport.
And Vauxhall Commercial Vehicles, which won the
inaugural 2006 Green Fleet LCV Manufacturer of the Year award for its
low CO2 models, has repeated its success in 2007.
The Green Fleet judges, comprising a panel of motoring
journalists, key fleet customers and industry experts, praised Vauxhall
Commercial Vehicles for its ongoing commitment to sustainable fuel
sources. The panel singled out the company’s B30 Biodiesel fleet trials
and availability of LPG conversions on its smaller models as key factors
in the decision to award the title to Vauxhall for the second year
running.
Vauxhall’s parent company, GM, is Britain’s biggest
manufacturer of commercial vehicles, with around 100,000 vans a year
produced in the UK at two of GM’s most efficient sites. The GMM Luton
plant builds the Vivaro panel van and its variants, while the popular
Astravan is constructed at GM’s Ellesmere Port factory – home of the
Astra hatchback.
Sales of Vauxhall vans have more than doubled since
2000, thanks to success driven by models such as the British-built
Vivaro, the seriously big Movano and a wide range of approved
conversions, while smaller vans such as the driver-oriented Corsavan and
Astravan, plus the massively popular Combo further strengthen the
marque’s profile in the LCV market.