Currently reading: Porsche confirms LMP1 WEC withdrawal, Formula E entry

Triple Le Mans winner quits series; Formula E entry from 2019

Porsche will withdraw from the World Endurance Championship (WEC) LMP1 class at the end of this season, but will maintain its GT effort with the Porsche 911 RSR. It has also confirmed its entry into the Formula E championship from 2019.

Porsche also announced that its LMP1 team would remain intact; this includes drivers Nick Tandy, Neel Jani, Earl Bamber, Brendon Hartley, Timo Bernhard and André Lotterer, although it's not clear which championships they will race in. Development of the Stuttgart-based firm's first Formula E race car is already under way.

The brand will continue its effort in racing in the GT class of WEC, with the 911 RSR now the focus of its combustion-engined racing efforts. It has seen great success in the LMP1 class, with three Le Mans 24 Hour victories in a row. 

Porsche’s Volkswagen Group stablemate Audi withdrew from the WEC last year as Volkswagen looked to cut costs amid ever-growing Dieselgate levies. The group posted increased profits this year.

The announcement also raises the possibility that Audi will enter Formula 1 from 2021 when engine regulations are tweaked, pending approval from the Volkswagen Group board. This is yet to be confirmed.

Like almost all of the other road car manufacturers who have entered the Formula E championship, Porsche will enter the pure electric race series with the interest of furthering its electric car development.

"Entering Formula E and achieving success in this category are the logical outcomes of our Mission E. The growing freedom for in-house technology developments makes Formula E attractive to us”, said Michael Steiner, board member for R&D at Porsche.

Earlier this week, Mercedes withdrew from the German touring car championship (DTM) and announced its entry into Formula E from 2019. 

Read more: 

Audi quits Le Mans and WEC for Formula E

Volkswagen Group profits continue to rise despite Dieselgate scandal

Mercedes to race in Formula E from 2019

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

The electric Nissan Leaf has its work cut out competing with cheaper mainstream cars - but it does make a case for itself

Join our WhatsApp community and be the first to read about the latest news and reviews wowing the car world. Our community is the best, easiest and most direct place to tap into the minds of Autocar, and if you join you’ll also be treated to unique WhatsApp content. You can leave at any time after joining - check our full privacy policy here.

Join the debate

Comments
14
Add a comment…
Straff 29 July 2017

Race track!

Sorry, I meant race track!

david RS 29 July 2017

To be realistic, the future

To be realistic, the future is not good for amateurs of motorsports and cars.

And in the street it's even worse : parking, traffic restriction, speed cameras, image, taxes, a plethora of speed reducers... In the future black box and camera ?

Bye bye the nice engines...

Now, the main items are SUVs, connexion, applications, autonomous capacity, ...

The century of car dream was the 20th.

To remain, positive this week-end, don't forget the rally of Finland !

bowsersheepdog 30 July 2017

david RS wrote:

david RS wrote:

To be realistic, the future is not good for amateurs of motorsports and cars.

And in the street it's even worse : parking, traffic restriction, speed cameras, image, taxes, a plethora of speed reducers... In the future black box and camera ?

Bye bye the nice engines...

Now, the main items are SUVs, connexion, applications, autonomous capacity, ...

The century of car dream was the 20th.

To remain, positive this week-end, don't forget the rally of Finland !

 

Those dream days will return when the electric car fad quickly runs out of steam.

Straff 29 July 2017

Development

So, like a load of other manufacturers, they claim they're going racing to perfect EV technology. What utter drivel. Tesla build the best EV's in the world and I doubt they've ever been anywhere near a test track. This is all about being seen to be environmentally concious and has nothing to do with development. VAG need to do a damn sight more to improve their tarnished image than spendi hundreds of millions on this cr*p. They should be thinking about their concience instead and paying out proper compensation to put right the damage they've done to the environment and their customer's wallets and purses. Utter scumbags