Home LivingTravelSailGP is changing sports forever using innovation and sustainabilityThe global sailing league organisers are using cutting-edge technology so races set an example for other big sporting eventsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Home LivingTravelSailGP is changing sports forever using innovation and sustainabilityThe global sailing league organisers are using cutting-edge technology so races set an example for other big sporting eventsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
The global sailing league organisers are using cutting-edge technology so races set an example for other big sporting events
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: SailGP)
(Image credit: SailGP)
Competitive sailing isn’t something you’d conventionally associate with super high tech innovation. But there’s something brewing in this exhilarating, wave-carving sport that might just change your mind. One competition in particular is taking advantage of cutting-edge technology that isn’t only transforming the world of sailing but could potentially revolutionise the nature of sports in general and how people compete in them, forever. At the helm of this drive? Sustainability.
Yes, it sounds a little far-fetched. I wouldn’t have believed it either. But I went all the way to San Francisco withSailGP- the organisers of one of the world’s biggest international sailing competitions - to get a glimpse behind the scenes of what’s happening in this sport and how innovation is playing a key role to ensure the end goal sustainability is the focus, not just the winning team.
About SailGP and the race
San Francisco is a city with a long history of hosting all sorts of boat races. Its large bay makes it a perfect venue for a sailing competition, with consistently strong winds and an accessible waterfront that gives people an up-close view of the action. It’s no wonder then, that SailGP used it for the launch of the second season of its new sustainability-focused leaderboard,the Impact League.
Tracking the positive actions international sail teams make to reduce their overall carbon footprint, the Impact League was set up as a response to the risks climate change is imposing on our environment. It’s hoped it will help accelerate inclusivity in sailing while showcasing how sustainability and positive social actions can be at the heart of sports.
(Image credit: SailGP)
(Image credit: SailGP)
SailGP claims this makes it the first sport to rank its own teams based on sustainability action and offer a monetary award (of a whopping $100,000) for the winning team.
“To mitigate this threat, the world of sport needs to come together to create a new ‘sustainable-normal’, where action on impact is not an optional extra but an intrinsic part of the status quo.”
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“We want to harness innovation in the marine industry to scale new technology to achieve our mission of becoming the world’s most sustainable and purpose-driven global sports and entertainment platform [while making] an impact that will encourage the world of sport to follow our lead.”
(Image credit: SailGP)
(Image credit: SailGP)
How they are using tech
So how exactly is SailGP harnessing tech to deliver sustainability across its events? I got an exclusive peek at some of the innovations making that possible at the SailGP Technical Area, or “tech base” during a practice run before the competition’s first race day. This is where the teams prepare for the final and make any additional updates or alternations to the cutting-edge F50 catamaran race boats before they get craned into the ocean.
Even the on-water support boats, which follow the races to offer medical assistance if needed as well as filming and spectating, are becoming greener, SailGP’s head of technology, Warren Jones, tells me in an interview. He explains that the company transitioned 11 boats to electric propulsion motors for the start of the 2022 race season to reduce their carbon impact.
Being such a huge event, you’d think the logistics and equipment needed to run and broadcast it would make it impossible to do sustainably. But it’s exactly this that’s a massive focus for SailGP. They’ve already done plenty to make these ambitions greener, especially when compared to other sports.
This cloud is particularly important as data transfer has a huge responsibility when it comes to the success of the competition.
(Image credit: SailGP)
(Image credit: SailGP)
“There are nine boats on the water, each with two cameras which all-in-all generate around 14 billion data requests - and that’s just in one afternoon,” Jones adds.
These requests are generated in an autonomous database and are used to power data-driven insights and augmented reality graphics in SailGP’s broadcast. This means it’s able to create nifty things like project a virtual racecourse over the water so the viewer can understand what’s happening.
SailGP has even thought about the recyclability of the race boats themselves, partnering with one of the world’s biggest carbon fibre recovery plants in the UK, ELG Carbon Fibre, to allow waste carbon fibre from the F50 race boats to be recycled and reintroduced into the manufacturing process for future seasons. This, it claims, will ensure a more responsible and reduced carbon manufacturing process.
Perhaps one of the most futuristic technological developments to be introduced into the competition, however, is the trialling of automated race markers. These innovative race marks are GPS positioned throughout the course and remote-controlled, which results in a need for on-water support fleet boats and therefore less damage to the seabed and carbon emissions.
A sport that’s about more than winning
While the Impact league is still a relatively novel competition, it’s already seen some significant and positive changes, especially in the behaviour of competing athletes. As a result of the dedicated focus the race has on sustainability, competitors have reduced the number of support team personnel travelling to races, which has reduced air miles as well as the transport to and from the airport and hotels. General waste during the events has also been reduced, for example, the Great Britain team has even removed single-use plastic waste from their race boat. Meanwhile, less energy is being used in the tents through energy monitors and smart meters and many sailors have even transitioned to vegan or plant-based diets during competition weekends. It’s clearly driving change and influencing people to think differently.
(Image credit: SailGP)
(Image credit: SailGP)
Could sustainability change the way sport is conducted forever? It certainly could if SailGP has anything to do with it.
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