As it should, and I hope it can. My post was more to suggest that their approach needs to be pervasive to the entire operation. Without an approach that includes every aspect of the racing any effort on the cars will be seen as token marketing. Racing teams in general, if committed to energy reduction in every dimension of their operation, would not only help to develop solutions, but also promote existing solutions to the fans of the sport. They could help eliminate the myth that acting sustainably means sacrificing any fun in your life.ISLAMATRON wrote:It is not about making the actual racing greener, it is about advancing greener technology, but it seems that is waste to many of you as well, guess you'll all go back to your home planet after this one is fully destroyed.
Just as racing helped advance safety technology, and braking tech & engine technology, it can do the same for greener, environmentally responsible technology.
As for the cars, the challenge is that the goal of green tech is efficiency, and F1 is a sprint formula. Perhaps if they required cellulosic fuels, limited the amount of fuel available, and took the constraints off of kers (let them use all of the energy recovered instead of a limited amount per lap) it would encourage developments that would enhance efficiency. The challenge is to encourage teams to use kers to improve efficiency instead of speed.
The question then is whether or not F1 would remain popular as an efficiency formula, since efficiency is generally inversely proportional to speed. I think a better approach is in the area of encouraging development of alternative fuels, since if we power the car with cellulosic ethanol we could go fast with impunity, with huge co2 reductions and no impact on food crops.
I suppose if it was an easy question someone would have come up with an answer by now. Without an answer the sport will become totally irrelevant, and all motorsport will simply cease to exist. I wonder how much time we have left.