Formula 1 is aiming to field a generation of new power unit by 2025 – and the championship wants that engine to be powered by 100% sustainable ‘drop-in fuel’ designed to help Formula 1 achieve its goal of being Net Zero Carbon by 2030.
2022 will already see Formula 1 move to E10 fuel, a mixture of 90%
fossil fuel and 10% ethanol. But with the launch of the new generation
of Formula 1 engines, the aim is to help develop a 100% sustainable fuel
– with Formula 1 actively engaged in discussions with fuel companies
about creating the fuel in the quantities needed for the championship,
as well as then scaling up production for wider social use.
This 100% sustainable ‘drop-in fuel’ – meaning it can be used in a
standard internal combustion engine without any modification to the
engine itself – will be laboratory-created, using components that come
from either a carbon capture scheme, municipal waste or non-food
biomass, while achieving greenhouse gas emissions savings relative to
fossil-derived petrol of at least 65%.
Crucially, the new fuel will also pack a punch worthy of the pinnacle of
motorsport, matching the energy density of Formula 1’s current fossil
fuel petrols – meaning the cars will be every bit as fast as they are
today.
It’s estimated that there will be 1.8 billion cars on the road by 2030,
with only 8% of those pure Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) – while
internal combustion engines will continue to be essential to air and sea
travel, as well as to the haulage industry.
By spearheading the development of 100% advanced sustainable drop-in
fuels, Formula 1 can play its part in making an enormous impact on the
global transport sectors’ greenhouse gas emissions.