RedNEO wrote: ↑21 Dec 2020, 17:04
Don’t take my word for it, take a read for yourself. It’s can be made with zero carbon emissions. It’s just what F1 and the car industry was looking for.
https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/arti ... arbon-fuel
Formula 1 engines will run on new green, sustainable fuel this winter after the first barrels of FIA-produced biofuel rolled into the factories of power unit manufacturers.
Mercedes, Ferrari, Renault and Honda, this week received the fuel, made from waste material, for testing with current technology.
It’s the latest step in Formula 1’s bid to produce zero carbon by 2030, without resorting to battery-powered racing.
The introduction of a sustainable fuel that can be made without carbon emissions is central to this.
Developed by the FIA’s Technical Department, it’s described as a “second-generation biofuel variety”, that has been refined using only bio-waste, not meant for human or animal consumption.
Thanks for the article. It's good to see they do take that aspect into consideration. Still, my remark that one must look at batteries the same way stands - batteries cost energy to make, but if built using renewable energy, that step is carbon neutral, too. Another question of importance is then,
which costs less energy to make + use over the entire life-cycle. Even if both technologies are fully carbon-neutral, if you can make/operate 10 electric cars with X amount of energy, and make/operate 15 biofuel-fueled cars with the same amount of energy, biofuel would win in that respect (and vice-versa). And then there's land use, and so on.
But anyway, the question whether F1 should be leading the pack in sustainable fuels is one of technological market relevance,
not one of technological feasibility - and in particular the question
"are biofuel-powered ICEs a serious contender for power generation in the (newly built) consumer transportation market in the mid- to long-term future?". And
that is where my main reservations lie. Now, if ICEs are indeed
not going to play an important role in newly built cars in the mid to long future, there is no incentive for manufacturers to invest majorly in ICE-development, and hence, no reason for F1 to be leading the pack from a technology development perspective. They may still use them from an entertainment perspective, and use biofuels to mitigate the negative impact (of the race-aspect) of the sport, but that's quite a different matter than from the perspective of tech-development.