Skip to main content

Government competition winners will use F1 technology to design greener cars

Formula 1 technology could soon make family cars lighter, improve fuel efficiency and help plug-in vehicles go further - after an innovative research project won a share of a US$54.6 million (£38.2 million) UK government prize. The project is one of more than 130 car manufacturers, technology companies and research centres across the country to have won a share of the money, announced in the Budget, which will create hi-tech jobs and help Britain become a global leader in exporting state of the art, emis
March 22, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Formula 1 technology could soon make family cars lighter, improve fuel efficiency and help plug-in vehicles go further - after an innovative research project won a share of a US$54.6 million (£38.2 million) UK government prize.

The project is one of more than 130 car manufacturers, technology companies and research centres across the country to have won a share of the money, announced in the Budget, which will create hi-tech jobs and help Britain become a global leader in exporting state of the art, emission-cutting technology.

A consortium including 7998 Jaguar Land Rover and 838 Nissan has received US$2.4 million (£1.7 million) for ‘light weighting’ technology - applying the science behind Formula 1 cars and space satellites to make passenger cars lighter and more fuel efficient. The results could reduce the weight of steel components in vehicles such as the Nissan Leaf by more than half, potentially extending a plug-in car’s driving distance by up to 25 per cent.

The winning projects were chosen following a competition launched last September encouraging companies to propose innovative ideas to cut vehicle emissions. The funding combines US$43 million (£30 million) from the Office for Low Emission Vehicles (OLEV) with US$11.7 million (£8.2 million) of additional funding from Innovate UK, who will support the schemes.

The OLEV Research & Development Fund will award funding to over 130 companies and research organisations across the UK including: a consortium led by Jaguar Land Rover and Nissan in the West Midlands; teams led by Faradion and  Magnomatics and the University of Sheffield in Yorkshire and the Humber; along with organisations such as Ceres Power in the south-east, Far-UK in the east Midlands, Sinamp in Scotland, the Clean Air Power in the north-west, Controlled Power in the east of England, Greater London, HiETA Technologies in the south-west and the Jaguar Land Rover/Nissan project in the north-east.

They will begin unveiling working prototypes by 2018 and could feature in passenger cars from 2020.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Funding for EV development in Brazil
    April 16, 2012
    The Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) has announced financing for a project by WEG electric motors to develop technology for electric vehicles (EVs). The company will receive US$4.72 million from the Bank, representing 62.3 per cent of the total investment of $7.55 million.
  • Winners in electric vehicle batteries
    July 13, 2015
    According to market analyst IDTechEx, which tracks the development of 45 electric vehicle categories and not just electric cars, there are now lithium-ion battery options for everything from forklifts and mobility vehicles for the disabled to e-bikes. Indeed, almost all the e-bikes in the West and Japan use them. 8000 forklifts in the USA have fuel cells with lithium-ion batteries though the Toyota Mirai fuel cell car and the Prius hybrid car still use NiMH. Whilst capturing market in micro hybrid cars,
  • Whim launch in Birmingham: new day dawning
    June 4, 2018
    MaaS Global’s Whim mobility service is expanding with its first launch outside Finland – and has chosen the UK’s second city as its base. Adam Hill reports from Birmingham
  • 2015 VeRoLog Solver Challenge winner named
    July 24, 2015
    The winner of the Vehicle Routing and Logistics Optimisation (VeRoLog) Solver’s Challenge was announced by PTV Group announced at the 2015 VeRoLog conference in Vienna. The competition was initiated by PTV Group and the Association of the European Operational Research Societies (Euro) Working Group on VeRoLog, with the aim of solving a specific transport planning problem derived from practice. Sixteen teams from Europe, India, South America and Africa participated in this year's challenge. First prize was