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The greenest car is the one already built

Today is World Environment Day. This year, the focus is on climate change. What that has to do with this website, you may wonder. Let me be clear: I have absolutely no intention of entering into a debate here about whether driving our cars contributes to it, or even whether it is a problem at all. For that, social media offers more than enough opportunities.

 

What I would like to reflect on for a moment, however, is the sustainability of our hobby.
Over the past years, I have met many people within our world. People who preserve, restore, rebuild and maintain. In an age of disposable culture, pre-war cars remind us that sustainability was once taken for granted: building things to last for generations.

 

And that is precisely what most of us continue to do.

Throw things away? Preferably not. Repair them instead. Or at the very least cherish the idea that something might one day still be repairable, and therefore need not be replaced immediately. A love of mechanics rather than consumption. Many of our cars have existed for nearly a century. Not because they were perfect, but because people made the effort to preserve them. Because quality, craftsmanship and longevity were once perfectly ordinary values.

Perhaps it is worth remembering that the next time we buy something seemingly designed for a single lifespan — or less. Cherish old, well-made products. Maintain them. Use them. Pass them on.

 

Then, hopefully, we may continue pottering around in our old cars for many years to come.

 

Words: Laurens Klein, photo of 1908 Fiat via Detroit Public Library

 

Published:
Friday June 5th, 2026
David Cochrane
07 June, 21:55
Save the planet - buy a car that lasts 100 years!
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John Sessock
07 June, 16:32
How true your words are, "Because quality, craftsmanship and longevity were once perfectly ordinary values". I remember when they were. Those words immediately brought me back to my parents and everything they stood for. Thanks for that...Hope you don't mind, but I plan to reuse them...no pun intended.
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Camille BOGLIARI
07 June, 13:48
Beautiful, very realistic words: let’s keep our old buildings alive, let’s repair them, let’s maintain them; they bring us so much joy, and what’s more, they help preserve nature by avoiding the construction of buildings that can’t be repaired, which create waste we don’t know what to do with……
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De beaux mots très réalistes , faisons vivres nos anciennes , réparons les , entretenons les , elles nous donnent tant de bonheur et de plus préserve la nature en évitant des construction non réparables qui créent des déchets que nous ne savons que faire ......
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Jeff Perkins
05 June, 14:35
So well spoken!
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fred veenschoten
05 June, 13:49
I do that with everything. I bake bread and have an electric knife to slice it. The switch broke in 6 months. I installed a new push button switch. The gearing that makes the blades osculate wore out and I have rebuilt it twice or three times.I just like doing that with everything.
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RedSimon
07 June, 13:10
I don't bake bread, the energy used to bake commercially is less per loaf than me cooking my own loaf. I don't use an electric knife, I have an old (manual) bread knife handed down through the family and it never needs repairing.
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Jeroen Booij
05 June, 09:31
That's the way!
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