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Shell Eco-marathon
View on WikipediaShell Eco-marathon is a world-wide energy efficiency competition sponsored by Shell. Participants build automotive vehicles to achieve the highest possible fuel efficiency. There are two vehicle classes within Shell Eco-marathon: Prototype and UrbanConcept. There are three energy categories within Shell Eco-marathon: battery-electric, hydrogen fuel cell, and internal combustion engine (gasoline, ethanol, or diesel). Prizes are awarded separately for each vehicle class and energy category. The pinnacle of the competition is the Shell Eco-marathon Drivers' World Championship, where the most energy-efficient UrbanConcept vehicles compete in a race with a limited amount of energy.
Key Information
Shell Eco-marathon competitions are held around the world with nine events as of 2018. The 2018 competition season includes events held in Singapore, California, Paris, London, Istanbul, Johannesburg, Rio de Janeiro, India, and China. Participants are students from various academic backgrounds including university teams such as past finalists University of British Columbia,[2] Duke University,[3] University of Toronto,[4] and University of California, Los Angeles.[5]
In 2018, over 5,000 students from over 700 universities in 52 countries participated in Shell Eco-marathon. The digital reach of Shell Eco-marathon is approximately several million.
History
[edit]In 1939, a group of Shell scientists based in a research laboratory in Wood River, Illinois, USA, had a friendly bet to see who could drive their own car furthest on one gallon of fuel. The winner managed a fuel economy of 49.73 mpg‑US (4.730 L/100 km; 59.72 mpg‑imp).[6] A repeat of the challenge yielded dramatically improved results over the years:
- 149.95 mpg‑US (1.5686 L/100 km; 180.08 mpg‑imp) with a 1947 Studebaker in 1949
- 244.35 mpg‑US (0.9626 L/100 km; 293.45 mpg‑imp) with a 1959 Fiat 600 in 1968[7]
- 376.59 mpg‑US (0.62459 L/100 km; 452.27 mpg‑imp) with a 1959 Opel in 1973.
During the 1980s, a Canadian version of the competition was called the 'Shell Fuelathon', with competitions in Oakville, Ontario Canada.[8][9][10][11]
The current record is 9,750 km/L (27,500 mpg‑imp; 22,900 mpg‑US), set in 2011 by the Polytechnic University of Milan's prototype Apollo.[12] The world record in Diesel efficiency was achieved by a team from the Universitat Politècnica de Valencia (Politechnical University of Valencia, Spain) in 2010 with 1396.8 kilometres per litre. In contrast, the most efficient production Diesel passenger cars achieve 60 mpg‑US (4 L/100 km; 72 mpg‑imp), and some high-powered sports cars achieve as little as 8 mpg‑US (29 L/100 km; 10 mpg‑imp).[13]
The current European Shell Eco-marathon[14] record for a combustion engine entry was set in 2004 by the team from Lycée La Joliverie (France) at 3,410 km on the equivalent of a single litre of fuel. Prototype vehicles using fuel cells are capable of greater energy efficiency. In 2005, a hydrogen-powered vehicle built by Swiss team ETH Zurich achieved a projected 3,836 km on the equivalent of a single litre of fuel. This is equivalent to the distance between Paris and Moscow. In 2013, ethanol efficiency world record was set by Toulouse Ingenerie Multidisciplinarie with 3100 km of a single litre of ethanol. This is equivalent to the distance between Toulouse and Istanbul.
In 2009, the entry from the Technical School at La Joliverie College, a car named "Microjoule," achieved 3,771 km per litre, or 0.02652 L/100 km.[15] Microjoule also won the 2023 competition, but with a significantly lower efficiency of 2507.15 km/l.[16]
Event
[edit]The Eco-Marathon has different classes of competition, according to the energy source used: Fuel cells, solar cells, gasoline, Diesel fuel and LPG. During the competition, cars must attain an average speed of at least 15 mph (23 km/h) over a distance of 10 miles (16 km). The course is typically a motor racing track or closed-off city streets. The fuel is strictly measured out for each entrant at the start and end of the course. The difference is used to calculate the vehicle's average fuel consumption. Solar-powered vehicles are not eligible for the grand prize for fuel efficiency.
In 2017, more than 100 student teams from many countries across the Americas competed in the Shell-Eco Marathon Americas to a crowd of over 20,000 throughout the competitions at the Cobo Center in Detroit, Michigan.[17]
Entrants
[edit]The top performing vehicles are purpose designed for high efficiency. Some vehicles use a coast and burn technique whereby they briefly accelerate from 10 to 20 mph (from 16 to 32 km/h) and then switch the engine off and coast until the speed drops back down to 10 mph (16 km/h). This process is repeated resulting in average speed of 15 mph for the course. Typically the vehicles have:
- Automobile drag coefficients (Cd) below 0.1
- Rolling resistance coefficients less than 0.0015
- Weight without driver under 45 kg
- Engine efficiency under 200 specific fuel consumption (cc/bhp/hr)
The vehicles are highly specialized and optimized for the event and are not intended for everyday use. The designs represent what can be achieved with current technology and offer a glimpse into the future of car design based on minimal environmental impact in a world with reduced oil reserves. The work of the participants can be used to show ways manufacturers could redesign their products.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "For Americas participants". www.shell.com. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
- ^ "Competition - UBC Supermileage". www.supermileage.ca. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
- ^ "Duke Electric Vehicles Team Hits Hollywood - Duke Pratt School of Engineering". Pratt.Duke.edu. 14 December 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
- ^ "U of T Engineering supermileage team wins Shell Eco-marathon in Detroit". University of Toronto News. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
- ^ "Results and awards". www.Shell.com. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
- ^ Affleck, W. S.; Toft, G. B. (1977), Blackmore, D.R.; Thomas, A. (eds.), "Mileage Marathons" (PDF), Fuel Economy of the Gasoline Engine : Fuel, Lubricants and other Effects, p. 221, ISBN 1349034185
{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link) - ^ "Home". Shell Fiat. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
- ^ "From My Archives – Shell Canada Fuelathon – frame18a". frame18a.ca. Retrieved 2024-10-10.
- ^ "Shell Canada 100 year milestones". www.shell.ca. Retrieved 2024-10-10.
- ^ "CONTENTdm Collection : Item Viewer". host11.be.cdm6.library.ubc.ca. Retrieved 2024-10-10.
- ^ WebDev, I. E. T. (1991-06-07). "Sunday Competition for Best Gas Mileage". UC Davis. Retrieved 2024-10-10.
- ^ "SHELL ECO-MARATHON 2011, VITTORIA DEL TEAM ITALIANO "MECC-SUN" DEL POLITECNICO DI MILANO" (in Italian). 30 May 2011.
- ^ "Lowest Fuel Economy Models: 2010 Model Year". United States Environmental Protection Agency. October 19, 2009. Archived from the original on April 18, 2006. Retrieved 1 March 2010.
- ^ "Shell Eco-marathon Europe". Royal Dutch Shell.
- ^ Ungureanu, Ionut. "12 Dollars To Circle the Earth with Microjoule, World's Most Efficient Car". Retrieved 28 December 2024.
- ^ "Energy Efficiency Competitions | Shell Eco-marathon". Retrieved 28 December 2024.
- ^ Shell Oil Company (21 December 2016). "Make The Future Detroit, Featuring Shell Eco-Marathon Americas To Shed Light On Bright Energy Ideas And Innovations That Address The World's Energy Challenge". PR Newswire. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
External links
[edit]Shell Eco-marathon
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and Inception
The concept of the Shell Eco-marathon originated in 1939 from a wager initiated by Bob Greenshields, Shell's Research Director, among colleagues at a Shell research laboratory in the United States, challenging them to determine who could travel the farthest distance using the least amount of fuel.[2] The winner achieved 49 miles per gallon (MPG), demonstrating early interest in extreme fuel efficiency through modified vehicles.[2] This informal experiment laid the groundwork for subsequent internal Shell staff competitions in the mid-20th century, which expanded to include basic engineering optimizations for energy conservation.[4] By the 1970s, Shell formalized the challenge for external participants, organizing the inaugural public competition in 1977 at Mallory Park in the United Kingdom, primarily targeting student teams to foster innovation in low-consumption vehicle design.[5] This event marked the transition from internal wagers to structured races emphasizing measurable efficiency metrics, such as distance per unit of fuel.[6] The modern Shell Eco-marathon as a recurring international student engineering competition was officially launched in 1985 with its first European event in France, featuring 25 teams constructing vehicles primarily from wood and fiberglass to compete for maximal energy efficiency.[2] This inception established core rules focused on prototype and urban concept categories, prioritizing empirical testing of powertrain and aerodynamic innovations over speed.[7] Subsequent iterations built on this foundation, evolving into a platform for advancing sustainable mobility technologies through rigorous, data-driven challenges.[2]European Foundations and Early Competitions
The European foundations of the Shell Eco-marathon trace back to 1939, when Bob Greenshields, Shell's Research Director, initiated a wager among colleagues at the Thornton Research Centre in the United Kingdom to determine the furthest distance achievable on one litre of fuel.[2] The winning entry, a modified Austin 7, achieved approximately 800 kilometres per litre, demonstrating early principles of fuel efficiency through streamlined design and lightweight construction.[2] This internal challenge laid the conceptual groundwork for subsequent efficiency-focused initiatives, emphasizing empirical testing of vehicle aerodynamics, powertrains, and energy management. The student-oriented Shell Eco-marathon competition formally launched in Europe in 1985 in France, marking the transition from informal wagers to structured educational events aimed at fostering innovation in energy efficiency.[2] The inaugural event featured 25 teams from four countries, primarily using wooden prototypes to compete for the maximum distance per litre of fuel, with initial records reaching around 680 kilometres per litre.[8] Held under controlled track conditions, these early gatherings prioritized safety, precise measurement of fuel consumption, and adherence to basic rules on vehicle dimensions and propulsion systems limited to combustion engines.[7] Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, the European competitions expanded annually, attracting growing numbers of student teams from across the continent and refining judging criteria to reward verifiable efficiency gains through repeated laps on oval tracks.[9] Participation surged as educational institutions recognized the programme's value in hands-on engineering training, with events rotating locations within France and later other European sites to accommodate increasing entries.[7] Efficiency records progressively improved, driven by iterative designs incorporating better materials and engine tuning, though constrained by the era's technological limits such as rudimentary electronics and fossil fuel dependencies.[8] By the mid-1990s, the event had established itself as a premier platform for prototyping low-energy vehicles, influencing broader discussions on sustainable mobility without compromising on empirical validation of performance claims.[10]Global Expansion and Regional Events
The Shell Eco-marathon expanded beyond Europe with the launch of its Americas edition in 2007, held at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, where 20 student teams competed for the first time in the region.[7] This marked a significant step in globalizing the competition, enabling participation from North and South American institutions and fostering energy efficiency innovations tailored to diverse regulatory and environmental contexts.[11] The Asia-Pacific region followed in 2010 with the inaugural event at Sepang International Circuit in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, drawing teams from across Asia and establishing a platform for high-efficiency vehicle prototypes amid growing regional interest in sustainable mobility.[12] Subsequent Asia events rotated locations, including Manila, Philippines (2014–2016), Singapore (2017 onward in some years), and Indonesia (e.g., Lombok in 2024), accommodating over 100 teams and participants from more than 20 countries in peak editions.[13][14] Regional events now operate annually across three primary zones: Americas, Europe (often combined with Africa in recent years), and Asia-Pacific (incorporating the Middle East since expansions like the 2025 debut in Doha, Qatar).[15][16] Americas competitions have shifted venues, from Sonoma Raceway to Detroit's Make the Future festival and Indianapolis Motor Speedway (e.g., April 2023 with over 65 teams), emphasizing urban and prototype challenges while attracting participants from the U.S., Canada, and Latin America.[17] Europe maintains its foundational role with events in locations like the Netherlands or UK circuits, while Africa integrations (e.g., 2024 Europe-Africa hybrid) have introduced teams from the continent, broadening access to over 2,000 global students across six events in 2022.[18] These regionals culminate in off-track awards and occasional world championships, such as UrbanConcept finals, promoting cross-regional knowledge exchange without a unified global track event.[19]Evolution Post-2020 and Recent Seasons
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted a full transition to virtual formats for the Shell Eco-marathon in 2020, replacing on-track events with online challenges and off-track awards to sustain team engagement amid global restrictions.[18] This shift emphasized digital learning sessions and recognition of non-physical achievements, such as innovation in design simulations.[20] In 2021, the programme evolved further with the introduction of the first global Virtual League, where teams accumulated points through diverse STEM challenges, alongside limited Mini Shell Eco-marathon events—smaller-scale physical competitions held only where safety protocols allowed.[21] These adaptations maintained participation levels while prioritizing health measures, marking a hybrid precursor to fuller resumption.[18] By 2022, physical track events returned selectively, combining with virtual elements; Europe and Africa hosted mini events at Circuit Paul Armagnac after a 14-year absence, while Asia saw over 40 teams compete on-track for the first time post-pandemic hiatus.[22] [23] This hybrid model facilitated a cautious scaling-up, with rules integrating virtual ideas into physical validations.[24] Full resumption occurred in 2023, ushering a "new era" focused on developing young energy leaders through regional on-track competitions in Americas, Asia, and Europe, plus the debut Autonomous Programming Competition to test software for self-driving efficiency.[25] [26] Recent seasons have emphasized regional specialization and technological expansion. In 2024 Europe and Africa, Polyjoule from Polytech Nantes, France, achieved 1,259 km/kWh in the prototype category.[27] The 2025 40th season features streamlined regional events: Asia-Pacific and Middle East at Lusail International Circuit, Doha, Qatar (February 8–12), with Beijing Institute of Technology securing runner-up in hydrogen at 478 km/m³; Americas at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (April 2–6), won by Knights ICE from Alden-Conger High School, USA, at 516.34 mpg; and Europe and Africa at Silesia Ring, Poland (June 10–15).[28] [29] [17] New additions include the Autonomous Urban Concept competition at Silesia Ring (June 10–12), targeting self-navigating urban vehicles, and a Brazil event (August 25–28), reflecting ongoing global outreach and integration of autonomy for real-world efficiency applications. [30]Competition Overview
Event Format and Locations
The Shell Eco-marathon operates through regional on-track competitions designed to test vehicles' energy efficiency under controlled conditions. Each event unfolds over multiple days, encompassing technical scrutineering to verify compliance with safety and design rules, practice runs for teams to familiarize with the track, and official attempts where vehicles complete a fixed number of laps—typically several kilometers—while organizers precisely measure energy consumption from the vehicle's power source. Efficiency is then computed as distance traveled divided by energy used, often standardized to kilometers per megajoule (km/MJ) or volumetric fuel equivalents like kilometers per liter, with rankings determined per vehicle category and energy type; valid runs require maintaining minimum speeds, avoiding stops, and adhering to track protocols without external assistance.[31][32] On-track awards are granted to teams achieving the highest verified efficiencies, while off-track evaluations recognize ancillary efforts such as innovative design, effective communication, and project management through judged presentations and documentation. Recent seasons have incorporated specialized formats, including mileage challenges for human-driven vehicles and autonomous driving trials in select regions, with top performers qualifying for future global championships starting in 2027. Events emphasize data-driven validation, using calibrated fuel metering or electrical measurement systems to ensure accuracy, and incorporate safety measures like mandatory driver training and vehicle stability checks.[33][34] Competitions are hosted at professional motor racing circuits worldwide to provide flat, closed-loop tracks conducive to repeatable testing, typically 2-5 kilometers in length, with events allocated by geographic region to accommodate student teams' logistics. In 2025, the Americas regional event occurred at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, United States, from April 2 to 6; the Asia-Pacific and Middle East edition at Lusail International Circuit in Doha, Qatar, from February 8 to 12; and the Europe and Africa gathering at Silesia Ring in Kamień Śląski, Poland. Similar venue patterns persisted into 2026, with Doha hosting again in January and Poland in June, reflecting a strategy of rotating circuits for accessibility while prioritizing facilities equipped for high-precision timing and energy logging.[17][28][33]Vehicle Categories and Classes
The Shell Eco-marathon divides vehicles into two primary categories: Prototype and Urban Concept, each emphasizing different design priorities to balance extreme efficiency with practical considerations.[31] Prototype vehicles prioritize absolute energy efficiency through highly streamlined aerodynamics, ultralight materials, and minimal structural elements, often resulting in low-slung, enclosed designs optimized for track conditions rather than road usability.[31] In contrast, Urban Concept vehicles simulate everyday passenger cars, incorporating features such as four wheels, a windshield wiper, driver ergonomics, and space for luggage to mimic urban drivability while still targeting high mileage.[31] These categories allow teams to compete in contexts ranging from theoretical efficiency limits to more realistic vehicle applications. Within these categories, vehicles are further classified by energy source into three main classes: Internal Combustion Engine (ICE), Battery Electric, and Hydrogen Fuel Cell.[35] ICE class vehicles use conventional fuels including gasoline, diesel, or ethanol, with engines designed for ultra-low consumption rates, often achieving equivalents of thousands of miles per gallon.[31] Battery Electric vehicles rely on lithium-based or similar rechargeable batteries powering electric motors, emphasizing regenerative braking and precise energy management.[31] Hydrogen Fuel Cell vehicles generate electricity onboard via hydrogen-oxygen reactions in a fuel cell stack, producing water as the sole byproduct and focusing on stack efficiency and hydrogen storage.[31] Teams select one vehicle category and one energy class per entry, resulting in six possible combinations, though certain regional events or championships may restrict options—for instance, the Championship Series is limited to Urban Concept vehicles.[36] All vehicles must adhere to strict technical specifications outlined in the official rules, including dimensions, weight limits, and safety features like roll cages and fire suppression systems, regardless of class.[34] Efficiency is measured in equivalent kilometers per megajoule or similar standardized units during timed track runs, with prototypes often setting records due to their specialized designs.[31]| Vehicle Category | Key Design Focus | Typical Efficiency Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Prototype | Aerodynamic streamlining, minimal weight | Extreme optimization for track-only performance, e.g., teardrop shapes and composite materials[31] |
| Urban Concept | Road-like practicality, passenger comfort | Balanced efficiency with features like seating for two and enclosed cabins[31] |
