Shake rattle and roll: Extreme E’s second season

The second season of the innovative Extreme E series has provided plenty of car-rolling drama, a few new locations and a different winner. So, how’s it progressing? Adam Hay-Nicholls went to the 2022 finale in Uruguay to find out

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Now it’s 1-1 to Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton. Rosberg X Racing dominated Extreme E’s inaugural season last year, while Hamilton’s X44 team came through at the final round to clinch the 2022 title. Nico wasn’t in Uruguay, but appeared on a Zoom call an hour after the chequered flag. “I can’t believe we lost the championship. It was in our hands for ages.” He said he’d been screaming at the TV at home in Monaco, jumping up and down and tearing his luxuriant hair out. “Every possible thing went wrong this weekend. But it’s been brilliant racing out there. We’ve got the best drivers in the world now. You can see everybody’s on the edge. It went down to the wire.”

In year one, it was a tremendous achievement to get any global sports series off the ground, what with coronavirus restrictions still in effect. Extreme E did things that had never been attempted before, such as the world’s most remote live sports broadcast, the first time team-mates of both genders had been mandated in motor sport, and of course a philanthropic green agenda which saw drivers taking time out from their EV battles to plant trees, clean beaches and swim with sea lions.

Inevitably, not everything went to plan. Arrangements to run races in the Amazon and Ushuaia in Argentina were kiboshed due to Covid. There was little or no commercial activation at the most difficult to reach rounds. Attempts to turn Jenson Button and Jamie Chadwick into dune-bashing maestros ultimately failed. The cars were nowhere near sufficiently robust and the batteries had a tendency to overheat.

Sébastien Loeb and Cristina Gutiérrez

Loeb and Gutiérrez do like to be beside the seaside

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CrossContact tyres

All teams have used Continental CrossContact tyres.

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In 2022, Spark Racing Technology – which admits its speciality is building single-seaters for smooth asphalt and is inexperienced when it comes to rallying – upped its game and got to grips with off-road. They’ve been helped enormously this year by suspension kings Fox. Williams Advanced Engineering, too, has fixed the batteries – and will bring more powerful cells for season three. Tracks were shortened to allow more laps and help make the racing closer. Venues were still chosen primarily for their environmental touchpoints, but were nearer to civilisation and less inhospitable. A tenth team arrived – McLaren. And several incoming rally drivers – some well-known, others ‘discovered’ – helped to tighten the male-female field and produce some truly spectacular racing.

“This year penalties, crashes and injuries all played a role”

Joining the grid were Nasser Al-Attiyah, the quadruple Dakar winner, and American Top Gear host, movie stunt driver and Global Rallycross ace Tanner Foust. The curtain-raiser in Saudi Arabia was moved from Al-Ula to Neom, site of the kingdom’s planned £410bn ‘smart city’, with a legacy project designed to tackle desertification. Rounds two and three both took place in Sardinia in July, which was visited in 2021 also. Here, seagrass was planted and olive groves burnt by wildfires are being restored in a long-term project. South America hosted the final two rounds; the Atacama Desert in Chile, where help was given to the endangered Loa water frog and a spotlight shone on sustainable copper mining; and Uruguay, where the focus was on the country’s impressive renewable energy resources and the cataloguing of whales.

Chip Ganassi’s racing

Chip Ganassi’s all-American set-up scored a single win in 2022 – Island X-Prix I in Sardinia

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Xite and Chip Ganassi at Uruguay’s Energy X-Prix

Keeping up with the Joneses: neighbours Xite and Chip Ganassi at Uruguay’s Energy X-Prix .

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The total broadcast audience stayed level with 2021: around 18.5 million per race. So what about the racing? Well, this year penalties, crashes and injuries all played a role in how the season shook out. Smashes continued to plague team Veloce; the charismatic Christine GZ broke her foot in the first round and never recovered her pace. In total, the team ran five different drivers, replaced personnel behind the scenes, and still finished the season bottom of the standings. Jenson Button’s JBXE had a tough year too, with four different drivers and just one podium finish. Rumour has it Jenson’s keen to sell. Xite Energy Racing moved up a gear, with owner Oliver Bennett ‘doing a JB’ and handing driving duties over to others after Saudi.

The spirited pairing of Catie Munnings and Timmy Hansen failed to score any wins for Andretti United this year. Their sister team of sorts, McLaren, had an encouraging inaugural season with both Foust and Kiwi Emma Gilmour more than up to the job. Once again, Chip Ganassi Racing suffered more than its fair share of technical gremlins, but luck finally swung its way in the Island X-Prix I when the US duo Sara Price and Kyle LeDuc were gifted their first victory.

Abt Cupra made a brilliant hire in the relatively unknown Klara Andersson, from Sweden, for the final two events; she and Al-Attiyah were third in Chile and first in Uruguay, and the 22-year-old is now one of the main talking points of the off-season. Acciona Sainz improved from fifth to third in the final standings, with Carlos Sainz surviving a massive shunt in Sardinia and team-mate Laia Sanz, a legend on two wheels, making great progress on four.

The Atlantic coast

The Xite Odyssey 21 tackles the Atlantic coast.

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McLaren jumping hills

McLaren leads JBXE across the Uruguayan moonscape

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The timing difference between the men and the women tumbled in 2022 to just a few seconds. “The gap between men and women has certainly got closer,” notes Rosberg. “When we started last year, the best women were 15 seconds off [their male team-mates]. It’s now much closer and they’re learning out there from the men all the time.”

Last year, the two women closest to the pace were Rosberg’s Molly Taylor (alongside five-time FIA World Rallycross champion Johan Kristoffersson) and Cristina Gutiérrez (alongside nine-time WRC champ Sébastien Loeb). For reasons that have never been revealed, though I believe money may have played a part, Nico dispensed with 2021 championship-winner Taylor. “Without going into detail, it was a very tough decision that we had to take together,” says Nico. The 34-year-old Australian made one appearance for JBXE in Saudi and raced the final round in Uruguay for Veloce. The British team has confirmed her and Kevin Hansen for next year already. For the ’22 season, Rosberg ran Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky, 30, formerly of JBXE and one-time girlfriend of Max Verstappen. “She’s developed a lot. In my opinion, she’s now the fastest woman out there – and probably the fastest female driver in any motor sport in the world,” adds the 2016 F1 champion of his charge, adding that next year, “I know Mikaela will be the fastest female. I am certain.”

“I congratulate Lewis. It’s fun that our rivalry is continuing in Extreme E”

Normally there are no spectators at these events, so as to keep the carbon footprint to a minimum, but in Punta, for the first time, 6000 locals were given free tickets and a fan zone was set up from which to watch the race.

It’s easy to be cynical about motor sport beating the green drum; some of the world’s most privileged people jetting around to play with their dirt-churning toys. The series’ carbon footprint is, inevitably, greater than if everyone stayed at home but, as CEO Alejandro Agag likes to say, “you can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs”. For the locals, the VIP guests and the audience watching at home, the race action was expertly interspliced with inspiring and educational videos on the environment.

I met up with Professor Richard Washington from Oxford University. He sits on XE’s Scientific Committee and will remind anyone who’ll listen that 30% of the world’s carbon emissions come from transportation. “I’m a motor racing fan, which makes me an unlikely climate scientist,” says the softly spoken South African. “Demonstrating what clean energy can do in a challenging environment like this, with snazzy cars running on clean energy, is the sort of nudge you need to make people see things differently.” XE is out to turn petrolheads into electroheads. It was this that led Nico Rosberg, who’s become a high-profile eco-entrepreneur in his own right, to enter a team.

Klara Andersson in a rush

Andersson was drafted in by Abt Cupra for the final two races.

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Command Centre

The TARDIS-like Command Centre

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RXR had arrived in Uruguay the championship leaders – 17 points ahead with a maximum of 30 available. Then a controversial ramming from Al-Attiyah and a broken steering arm put Kristoffersson and Åhlin-Kottulinsky on the back foot. X44 were classified third in the final, and with that took the title.

“I congratulate Lewis wholeheartedly,” said his old Mercedes foe. “It’s fun that our rivalry is continuing in Extreme E.” Turning his attention to work off-track, Rosberg says, “I think [RXR] are doing the best job in terms of sustainability initiatives, with reforestation and environmental aspects, but Lewis’s team is leading the way in terms of diversity. So, I want to congratulate him on that as well. It’s great to see. And we’re going to get them back next year! The bigger the rivalry, the better it will be to get Extreme E’s message across. The more visible this sport is, the more impact it will have. The power of sports is unbelievable.”


Expansion plans for Extreme E

More cars to come with a new class for hydrdogen

The finishing touches are being put to Extreme E’s season three calendar for 2023. The Desert X-Prix will take place in Saudi Arabia once again on March 11-12. On May, 13-14 Scotland is set to host its first race. The series will return to Sardinia on July 8-9, followed by a round TBC on September 16-17. The first choice is the Amazon rainforest, if they can make it work logistically. Alejandro Agag, below, had a meeting with Brazil’s president Lula during Cop27 to push the plan forward. Otherwise, there are preparations going on to bring the sport to an undisclosed area of the US.

Alejandro Agag

Alejandro Agag

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The season finale will take place in Chile on December 2-3, which will once again be christened the Copper X-Prix.

There will be a new team: XE Sports Group, based in Australia, has a tie-up with Chinese electric car giants BYD.

Beyond 2023, Agag would like to see the calendar expand to ten races. The difficultly is the St Helena, the ship that transports all the cars and logistics around the world. It takes time to sail between continents. Its fate and its place at the heart of Extreme E may be in the balance.

In 2024, the idea is to introduce more cars to the grid via Extreme H. This will be the first hydrogen-powered championship. “In my view, hydrogen is a good compliment to battery cars,” says Agag. “BEVs are great in cities, but for long-haul journeys maybe hydrogen is better. Maybe I’ll have ten Extreme E cars and ten Extreme H, or five and five. I’m making the first prototype at the moment.”

Nico Rosberg says his team are interested in fielding both. “Hydrogen will have a role to play in transportation in the future. I know of OEMs [vehicle manufacturers] that would be interested to enter Extreme H. We will look at it too, because it’s a relevant technology.”