Gulf Today

‘Formula E will have the ‘road relevance’to overtake F1’

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LONDON: Formula One is enjoying a boom in popularity but electric Formula E will ultimately be the main focus of manufactur­ers and sponsors seeking road relevance and green credential­s, Envision Racing team boss Sylvain Filippi predicted on Tuesday.

Speaking at the Reuters IMPACT conference in London, Filippi said internal combustion engine-based championsh­ips like Formula One would struggle to argue relevance as electric car ownership rises.

The European Commission wants a 100% reduction in CO2 emissions from new cars by 2035, making it impossible to sell combustion engine cars from then. Britain has said it will ban sales of new petrol and diesel cars and vans in 2030.

Formula One’s new power unit from 2026 will be a high-revving 1.6 litre V6 engine, with a significan­tly greater electric element and using 100% sustainabl­e fuels.

“It’s going to be quite difficult to live with a road map that’s clearly completely mis-aligned with what’s on the road,” Filippi told Reuters.

“I think at some point the road relevance question will become very binary.

“Are you road relevant or are you not? You can’t really be in-between post-2030. There’s still a bit of time but it comes quick.

“All the money’s going to go into Formula E because that’s the only thing that’s acceptable ... a lot of brands will not really be able to sponsor internal combustion sport.”

For now Formula One’s marketing pull and viewing figures are far stronger, with glamorous new races in the United States drawing fresh sponsors and a Neflix docu-series “Drive to Survive” turbo-charging fan interest.

Formula One has also set a target of having a net zero carbon footprint by 2030 but Formula E has exclusive rights until 2039 as the only full-electric championsh­ip approved by the FIA motorsport governing body.

German marques Audi and Mercedes have recently let Formula E, however, with the former set to debut in Formula One with their own engine from 2026.

Mercedes own only a third of their oncedomina­nt Formula One team, reducing it from 60% in 2020 with petrochemi­cals giant Ineos taking a one third share and team boss Toto Wolff also owning the same amount.

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