Ok that's a fair pointgato azul wrote:
I just think, that any discussion about the pro and cons of an race series with electric cars should not exclusively hinge around the "is it/it is green(er)" argument.
That's true but most sport don't actually negatively effect the planet (i.e. racing cars with their emissions and fuel usage during a potential fuel shortage crisis).gato azul wrote: Many sports don't add anything to the advancement of society and humankind in general, but yet nobody questions their Raison d’être on a constant basis and demands changes or that they are being banned.
It seems to be sufficient, that people enjoy to watching and/or participating in them.
Why do we need to hold (motor) racing to a different standard?
The argument that racing needs to be relevant to automotive development is bogus.
If it is, fine it's an added benefit, but as long as the operational profiles of both vehicles are on polar opposite ends of the scale - any crossover effect will be minimal.
Nobody (should) drive(s) their street car in a way a race car is driven/should be driven, so what's the point.
It's like saying that a fighter jet should be relevant to civil aircraft development - yes their is/can be some overlap, but it's minimal and nobody will go and design or spec a fighter jet thinking "ah maybe we should do this, because it will be useful for civil aviation".
If you would like to see real/tangible advancements in EV development for daily use, racing is not the way to go.
Racing can be used as a marketing tool to help shape consumer perception and maybe increase the "cool factor"/brand exposure, but that's as good as it will get.
But let's not confuse/mingle "public perception shaping" with engineering matters.
This isn't a specifically racing problem. Hunting as a sport is constantly underfire as well. Unless racing either directly contributes to society/technology or it becomes harmless (doesn't negatively effect the world in any way) you'll constantly see the "green" issue come up. Just the facts of life that we have to be more mindful about how we actually effect this planet. It's not 1950s anymore. Unless you think it's ok that the entire world acts like China (pollutions left and right, and as a person who's lived in China I can say that the people there are effected by very poor air too)