Can Rallying Rebuild Glory In A Car Market Focused On Sustainability?

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WRC Nachrichten

FIA,World Rally Championship,Rallying

I am the editor of independent electric vehicle website WhichEV. I have 30 years’ experience as a technology journalist and a life-long love of cars, so having the two come together has been a dream come true. I first saw the potential for electric vehicles when I became one of the first people to drive a Nissan Leaf back in 2011.

The World Rally Championship used to be one of the most iconic motorsports, second only to Formula 1 for public attention, in Europe at least. But the race series has fallen from its former glory more recently. WRC has just hosted its annual race weekend in Finland, the spiritual home of rallying, so I talked to the team about how the sport could remain relevant in a world where sustainability is becoming central for automotive technology.

There’s no sign that WRC will be going all-electric anytime soon, either. “We will drive with a hybrid system with our three existing manufacturers for the next two years, 25 and 26,” says Siebel. “For 27 onwards we need more cars. The fact that the whole automotive industry is in a big transformation process, and nobody knows exactly which technology will be relevant in a few years, doesn't help.

“We are offering both worlds,” argues Siebel. “That means we have full sustainable fuel and hybridization, which will be the future for at least two thirds of the car passenger car markets, until 2045. Even Akio Toyoda said by 2035 only one third of cars will be fully electric, so what to do with other two thirds? We have the answer. We have full sustainable fuel plus hybridization. Once pure electrification is ready to get enough range, power, and safety, maybe we can run both alongside.

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