Try GOLD - Free
Cleaner, greener fuels are coming to Formula 1. Here's what that means
BBC Science Focus
|November 2025
The 2026 F1 championship will be raced using 'sustainable' fuels. But how much of a difference will it actually make to the sport's carbon footprint?
Next year, Formula 1 (F1) will pull into the pits for one of its most ambitious overhauls yet – trading fossil fuel for a 100-per-cent sustainable alternative.
It's part of a broader effort to meet new environmental rules and to prove the sport can, in F1’s words, “keep us driving without building new cars.”
But not everyone’s convinced. With fuel from races making up less than one per cent of the sport’s total carbon footprint, experts say F1 has far bigger environmental problems to solve. So, what are they and how can they be tackled?
FRESH FUEL
In 2020, F1’s governing body, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), set a deadline for race cars’ engines to run on 100-per-cent sustainable fuels from 2026 and for the sport to be carbon neutral by 2030.
The transition began in 2023 and 2024, when Formula 2 and Formula 3 (Fl’s feeder racing series) started using 55-per-cent ‘sustainable bio-sourced fuel’, before switching to 100-per-cent ‘advanced sustainable fuel’ in 2025.
Now, F1 has developed its own ‘sustainable’ fuel for 2026. This fuel has been designed specifically for the hybrid engines in today’s F1 cars, which rely on both an internal combustion engine and two electric motor-generators.
F1 says the new fuel won’t add to the overall amount of carbon in the atmosphere. Instead, the carbon used in the new fuel will be extracted from existing sources – including household waste and nonfood biomass – or captured as carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere.
This will then be used to make a synthetic fuel - an artificially-produced fuel designed to do the same job as the fossil fuel-derived petrol that’s currently being used. In the long term, the FIA says that F1, 2 and 3 will all eventually adopt this “fully synthetic hybrid fuel”.
This story is from the November 2025 edition of BBC Science Focus.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC Science Focus
BBC Science Focus
PASS THE PLASTIC
All of us are ingesting microplastics. Could dietary fibre help us get it out?
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
Finally... An EV worthy of your bedroom wall
Ferrari's new Elettrica could be the car that gets dyed-in-the-wool petrolheads to long for an EV. It could also be the car that reshapes the entire EV landscape
4 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
THE PUDU
Just when you thought Bambi couldn't get any cuter, meet the pudu, the world's smallest deer. Standing little taller than a domestic cat, what it lacks in size, it more than makes up for in allure. Doe-eyed, button-nosed, with little legs and perky ears, this diminutive South American mammal looks like it has stepped straight out of a Disney film.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
60-year mystery of the fossil skull that baffled scientists may finally be solved
The Petralona skull was discovered in Greece in 1960, yet its origin has perplexed experts – until now
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
Only 1% of the world is eating a healthy and sustainable diet
A major report found healthier diets could transform the food system
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
COLD AND FLU SEASON
Nobody enjoys being stuck in bed sneezing and coughing the days away. But there are steps you can take to increase your chances of avoiding these winter ailments
4 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
There's another diabetes in town, here's how to recognise it
Misdiagnosis rates for this rare type of diabetes could be complicating treatment for patients
5 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
THE QUEST TO FIND THE EDGE OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
NASA's newly launched IMAP mission is set to tell us more about the boundary between our Solar System and interstellar space than ever before
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
WHICH VAPE FLAVOUR IS WORSE FOR YOU?
If you're trying to quit smoking, you'll have probably heard talk that switching to e-cigarettes - or vapes - is a healthier option. One study by researchers at University College London estimated that in 2017 alone, over 50,000 people stopped smoking thanks to their use of e-cigarettes.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Science Focus
WANTED: GUT BACTERIA DEAD OR ALIVE
There are millions of bacteria living in our guts. There are millions of dead bacteria there too. And scientists are learning just how much potential the dead ones have to improve our health
7 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
