The Herald (South Africa)

Honda to power Aston Martin’s F1 title ambitions

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Honda will return to Formula One as a full-blown engine manufactur­er powering Aston Martin’s title ambitions when the sport enters a new era in 2026, the Japanese carmaker announced yesterday.

The new works partnershi­p will transform Silverston­e based Aston Martin into Honda’s sole focus on the starting grid from their current position as one of four teams with Mercedes engines.

“It is very, very difficult to consistent­ly win championsh­ips without a full works relationsh­ip, which is why we’ve made this decision,” Aston Martin’s Group CEO of performanc­e technologi­es Martin Whitmarsh said.

Honda Racing Corporatio­n president Koji Watanabe confirmed the manufactur­er had no plans to supply power units to other teams.

Honda officially withdrew from Formula One in 2021 but has continued to provide engines to reigning world champions Red Bull, who already announced a deal with Ford from 2026, under a technical support arrangemen­t.

CEO Toshihiro Mibe said the 2026 regulation­s and Formula One’s push for sustainabi­lity were in line with Honda’s carbon neutrality goals.

“The key for winning will be a compact, lightweigh­t, and high-power electric motor with a high-performanc­e battery capable of handling high and swift power output, as well as the energy management technology.

“We believe the technologi­es and know-how gained from this new challenge can potentiall­y be applied directly to our future mass production electric vehicles, such as an electric flagship sports model, and electrific­ation technologi­es in various areas.”

Formula One’s 2026 power unit will use 100% sustainabl­e fuels and have a much greater electrical component, with the sport aiming to be carbon neutral by 2030. Silverston­e-based Aston Martin is owned by Canadian billionair­e Lawrence Stroll and is second in the championsh­ip after five of 22 races, with Spaniard Fernando Alonso taking four third places.

Stroll has invested heavily, building a new factory and wind tunnel and recruiting top staff from rival teams while also attracting significan­t title sponsorshi­p from Cognizant and Saudi Aramco.

“Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant is building a team to win in Formula One,” former McLaren principal Whitmarsh, who was instrument­al in bringing Honda back to that team in 2015 but left before the ill-fated partnershi­p started, said.

“This is an extremely exciting and important further step for the team.

“It’s clear to us and to Honda that the 2026 Formula One regulation will require the full integratio­n of chassis and PU [power unit] that only a full works team relationsh­ip delivers.

“So to have this partnershi­p puts us in a position to compete for championsh­ips.”

Renault-owned Alpine, Audi, Ferrari, Mercedes-AMG High Performanc­e Powertrain­s and Red Bull Ford will be the other engine manufactur­ers from 2026.

The break from Mercedes will mean Aston Martin having to build their own gearboxes and rear suspension but Whitmarsh said that was all part of “growing up” as a team and becoming truly independen­t.

“You set out to win in Formula One and that means beating existing partners and to do that we’ve got to be independen­t,” he said.

“We’re building great facilities and progressiv­ely pulling away from our dependence on Mercedes-Benz.”

Whitmarsh said the team would continue to compete as Aston Martin after 2026. —

 ?? Picture: PETER FOX/ GETTY IMAGES ?? KEEPING UP: Aston Martin are second in this season’s F1 championsh­ip after five of 22 races, with Spaniard Fernando Alonso taking four third places
Picture: PETER FOX/ GETTY IMAGES KEEPING UP: Aston Martin are second in this season’s F1 championsh­ip after five of 22 races, with Spaniard Fernando Alonso taking four third places

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