OUT OF THE BOX

Epic world solar car race begins in Australia

An epic 3,000-kilometre (1,860-mile) solar car race across the desert heart of Australia designed to showcase new technology that could one day help develop commercial vehicles got underway Sunday.

The World Solar Challenge, first run in 1987 and last held in 2015, began in a high-tech, futuristic flurry from Darwin’s State Square.

Dutch team Nuon is aiming to defend its title but Belgium’s Punch Powertrain led the 41 cars—powered by the sun and mostly developed by universities or corporations—off on the punishing journey south to Adelaide after a surprise win in Saturday’s time trial. 

“We knew our car was good but we never expected pole because there are a lot of competitors over here, a lot of very fast looking cars,” team manager Joachin Verheyen told reporters.

The event has become one of the world’s foremost innovation challenges with teams looking to demonstrate designs that could one day lead to commercially available solar-powered vehicles for passengers.

Google co-founder Larry Page and Tesla co-founder J B Straubel are past competitors who credit the event in influencing their careers.

The main action will be the streamlined Challenger class—slick, single seat aerodynamic vehicles built for sustained endurance and total energy efficiency.

Dutch team Nuon crossed the finish line first two years ago, taking 33.03 hours to make the punishing trip ahead of Japan’s Tokai University, the 2011 winner, in a nail-biting climax.

Both teams are again in the hunt this year, with cars from the United States, Australia, Malaysia, India and South Africa among competitors up against them.

There is also a Cruiser class which aims to showcase solar technology for mainstream vehicles that are more practical for day-to-day use.

Entrants come from Hong Kong, Singapore and even Iran.

“Of course, the point of this challenge is not just to go fast, or to develop technology that will never reach the mainstream,” said event director Chris Selwood.

“Our founder, Hans Tholstrup, and competitors past and present, are all determined to make sustainable, energy positive, solar electric cars and renewable technology a reality.”

Teams are allowed to store a small amount of energy but the majority of their power has to come from the sun and their vehicle’s kinetic forces.

Crews are allowed to drive between 8am and 5pm each day and simply set up camp wherever their car pulls off the road at the end of the day. The first car to cross the line in Adelaide is the winner.

There are seven checkpoints along the route where drivers can get updates on their standings, the weather, and do basic maintenance—clearing any debris from the car and adjusting tyre pressure.

Liat

Recent Posts

German Defence Force Expands Use of Driving Robots for Driverless Testing

The Bundeswehr acquires a fourth Automated Driverless Testing Solution from AB Dynamics The solution removes…

13 hours ago

Infineon introduces ultra-low noise XENSIV™ TLE4978 hybrid Hall and coil current sensor for next-generation power systems

Munich, Germany – 17 March 2026 – Infineon Technologies AG (FSE: IFX / OTCQX: IFNNY)…

13 hours ago

Menlo Micro and Rosenberger partner to develop cryogenic switching module for quantum computing

Menlo Microsystems and Rosenberger have announced a strategic partnership to develop a multichannel ultra-low power…

1 day ago

Infineon strengthens leadership in the global microcontroller market

Infineon Technologies continues to strengthen its position as the global leader in the microcontroller (MCU)…

1 day ago

Tesla explores chip manufacturing initiative to support next-generation AI and autonomous systems

Tesla is reportedly exploring plans to expand its semiconductor capabilities as part of a broader…

1 day ago

Israeli Tech Company AU10TIX Is Getting Ahead of Identity Fraud Before It Happens

Identity fraud has outpaced the tools businesses once relied on to fight it, so being…

1 day ago