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Australia bushfires: F1 monitoring fires before start of new season


Australia is fighting an unprecedented bushfire season, fuelled by record temperatures and widespread drought

Formula 1 says it is monitoring the Australian bushfire crisis before the start of the 2020 season in Melbourne on 13-15 March.

The country has witnessed the worst fire season in its history which has claimed a record-breaking 4.9m hectares, an area larger than Denmark.

Air quality in Sydney and Melbourne has been at unhealthy levels as fires rage in New South Wales and Victoria.

F1 says it is in constant contact with the race organisers on the issue.

The F1 community, including the teams, and the Australian Grand Prix Corporation are also planning some form of support for the victims of the fires, although details are still being worked out.

At least 25 people and millions of animals have died since the fire season started in September and almost 2,000 homes have been destroyed.

F1 attempts to go green

F1 could have something of an image problem, to say the least, when the season starts in Melbourne in two months’ time.

The Australian bush fires have wrought devastation over a vast area, and the state in which the Grand Prix is held has been at the forefront.

The fires have been fuelled by climate change – last year was Australia’s warmest on record – and F1 is poised to fly to the continent in a fleet of long-haul jets and literally burn carbon for fun for three days.

The optics of that are bad, regardless of any help the sport can provide for victims of the fires.

But F1 has been working hard to combat the image it has in some quarters as a profligate and irresponsible activity in the context of the environmental issues faced by the planet.

For a start, the turbo-hybrid engines introduced in 2014 have provided revolutionary increases in efficiency.

They have a thermal efficiency (the measure of their ability to transform fuel-energy into power) of more than 50%, when road-going petrol engines are in the region of 30% and diesels around 40%.

Knowledge from the technology developed in these engines – developed at a cost of many millions of pounds – has already made its way into improving efficiency of road cars in areas such as the improvement of electric motors, batteries, energy management, eTurbos and more.

But F1 is determined to go much further.

F1 engines already use a proportion of biofuel – the current technical regulations dictate fuel must have 5.75% of bio-components, and the plan is to increase that to 10% in 2021

Last November, it announced a project to go carbon neutral by 2030, and plans are already afoot for the next generation of engines, scheduled to be introduced in 2025, to run on carbon-neutral synthetic fuels.

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