xpensive wrote:As usual I agree with strad, if 26 racing cars consumes 10 000 or 8000 litres of petrol over the weekend is rather insignificant,
when comparing to a Boeing 747, which can be filled up with more than 200 000 litres of fuel before take-off.
If 10 000 spectators use their cars to a soccer game, that's surely 30 000 litres there.
Then ther's the symbolic value of course, but I doubt if the average F1 fan care very much.
Problem is that people that give money to Formula One(understand "people targeted by manufacturers, sponsors and TV ads") are not average F1 fan but regular people who don't think it is insignificant. For them it is just a waist of petrol and Formula One is bad for Earth.
Formula One and motor racing in general is born and grow up during a time when petrol was an endless ressource and green effect was not a concern for regular people. Now it is and to keep the business working, you must please your customers, who are not F1 fans but regular people who sometimes act like sheeps.
I think France is a good example of that. 10 years ago, we don't give a sh*t about that. Now it's all "CO2 is bad, F1 is bad, blablabla" and we now have no driver neither a team nor a damn Grand Prix! A shame for whose organised the first motor race...
Formula One needs to change its image and a direct link to regular road car if they want to survive the 20 next years.
Sure Ferrari will not be happy but I'm sure they will have to drop their 6l V12 sooner or later. 3liter V8 turbo like the F40 coupled to a KERS, is that really bad?