F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

An F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook has been released, and all teams and the FIA will be looking to apply its lessons to F1 as part of F1’s Net Zero 2030 commitment. I also look at technology transfer from Nissan’s Formula E team to their road vehicles, the role F1 fans play in sustainability and Mission H24’s collaboration with Bosch Motorsport. All this and more in this week’s Sustainable Motorsport Roundup.


Sustainable Motorsport News

McLaren Racing HQ

All 10 F1 teams will receive an ‘F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook‘, produced by McLaren, Deloitte, and the FIA to improve sustainability processes – with a view to potential rule changes in future.

“The handbook contains a guide for how teams can measure ‘circularity’, in other words, the impact of a product on the current global ecosystem and its potential to be recycled or reused in another capacity rather than simply consigned to waste. Teams will then be able to collect that data for their internal processes and manufacturing, and feed their numbers back to the FIA.”

Autosport has more details here. McLaren has more details here.


Nissan Formula E Team

The Nissan Formula E Team has explained how Nissan Research & Development played a key role in the Japanese outfit’s “stunning” start to Season 11. Nissan Formula E Team’s Managing Director and Team Principal, Tommaso Volpe, states that the “transfer of expertise that the Chief Powertrain Engineer brings from the automotive side of the business to the competitive side of it in our Formula E Team is vital. It shows the importance of the entire Nissan workforce worldwide in helping us to achieve these results on-track.” You can read more about this here.


F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

Maja Czarzasty-Zybert looks at how F1 fans can help drive F1’s green transformation. “Their travel, consumption, and daily choices significantly impact the sport’s carbon footprint.” Read more about what they can do here.


Maserati Tipo Folgore GEN3 Evo

Since Maserati MSG Racing driver Stoffel Vandoorne joined the ABB FIA Formula E Championship eight years ago, he has become a proponent of electric vehicles and today actively encourages the public to switch from piston-driven, gasoline-powered engines.

“The most impressive thing is seeing how much the world actually has evolved towards electric cars,” Vandoorne said as the global all-electric open-wheel racing series prepares to make its lone U.S. visit April 10-12 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Read more about what he and teammate Jake Hughes have to say about EVs here.


Sustainable Motorsport Tech

F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

The collaboration between the ACO and the H24Project for emission-free competitions is significantly strengthened by the latest partnership with Bosch Motorsport, a major player in the motorsport industry. As part of Bosch Engineering GmbH, an engineering partner of the automotive industry for more than 25 years, Bosch Motorsport supports some of the most important racing series in the world as a partner and technology supplier.

For the project, Bosch Motorsport is developing the Liquid Hydrogen Storage Control Unit (L-HSCU). This unit is specifically designed for the liquid storage of hydrogen in race cars, playing a crucial role in the integration of hydrogen technology in motorsport. The L-HSCU manages the liquid hydrogen storage in real-time to ensure optimal operating conditions. It monitors and controls all the sensors and actuators that continuously provide data on the state of the storage system. The control unit also communicates with both onboard and offboard refueling systems, ensuring an efficient and safe refueling process, crucial for racing operations. The L-HSCU will provide the highest level of safety for operation in the Motorsport environment, in accordance with the applicable FIA regulations.


Series News

Net Zero 2030

Olivia Hicks explains in Formula Flash how not talking about climate change could be F1’s key to sustainability success.

“The newly released document failed to detail how Formula 1 plans to engage fans in environmental education initiatives. However, that might not be such a bad thing. Unlike Formula E or Extreme E (now Extreme H) with built-in sustainability missions, racing series like Formula 1, IndyCar and NASCAR face an obstacle familiar to most industries: changing public opinion. And while electric racing competitions may be able to easily shout about rising sea levels, it could be in Formula 1’s best interest to keep its sustainability language strategic.”


F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

As Formula E prepares to race in Miami, here are two articles from both Autoweek and Autosport looking at what the series has been up to since its last race.


F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

PMW looks at how the World Rally Championship lost its hybrids and what that means for 2025. “For Toyota and the other teams, the removal of the hybrid necessitated a reassessment of its engine tuning.”


I have yet more race driver development resources for you in this week's jam-packed Driver Development Roundup. French F4 test

French F4 is using new sustainable tires this year and one of the questions during the series test at Le Mans was how the teams would cope according to Feeder Series.

“One of the main talking points of the pre-season tests was the new “sustainable” tyres introduced by Pirelli this season. The increase in the race lengths from 20 to 30 minutes means tyre management is set to be even more crucial. Despite the longer races, drivers are still allocated only two sets of new tyres per weekend, one of which must necessarily be used in free practice, so some drivers were considering skipping practice to save tyres for the rest of the weekend.”


Getting to the Track Sustainably

F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released
F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released
F1 Constructors’ Circularity Handbook Released

Mark Boudreau
Author: Mark Boudreau

Mark is the publisher of Motorsport Prospects. As a lawyer, he applies his legal background and research skills to assist race drivers by showcasing the resources they need to make their motorsport careers happen.