Mahindra Racing
Mahindra Racing is the Formula E team of Indian multinational conglomerate Mahindra & Mahindra, established as one of the founding entrants in the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship's inaugural 2014–15 season.[1][2] The team, headquartered in Mumbai and operating under the motto "Together we rise," participates to develop electric vehicle technologies via its "Race to Road" program, transferring innovations from its M-series powertrains to road cars.[1][3] Over 147 race starts, Mahindra Racing has achieved five victories—the first in the 2016–17 season, followed by two wins by Felix Rosenqvist in 2017–18, Jérôme d'Ambrosio's triumph in Marrakesh during season 5, and Alex Lynn's success in London in season 7—along with 29 podiums, 11 pole positions, and 10 fastest laps.[1][3] Its highest teams' championship finish was fourth place in 2017–18, though performance dipped in seasons 8 and 9, with a strong resurgence in season 11 yielding multiple podiums for drivers Nyck de Vries and Edoardo Mortara, culminating in fourth overall.[1][3] For the 2025–26 season, the team unveiled the Gen3 Evo-spec M12Electro, the series' most efficient car, and fields de Vries, Mortara, and Indian talent Kush Maini.[2][4] Notable challenges include a 2023 withdrawal from the Cape Town E-Prix due to rear suspension safety concerns and a brief 2024 backlash over an AI-generated influencer ambassador, which the team discontinued following public criticism.[5][6] Despite these, Mahindra's sustained commitment underscores its role in advancing sustainable motorsport and EV engineering amid a competitive grid featuring manufacturers like Jaguar and Porsche.[1][2]
Company Background and Formation
Origins within Mahindra & Mahindra
Mahindra Racing originated as the motorsport subsidiary of Mahindra & Mahindra, an Indian conglomerate with roots in automotive manufacturing and engineering innovation. The team's formation stemmed from a strategic decision to leverage competitive racing for technology development, brand enhancement, and global visibility, beginning with two-wheeled competition rather than four-wheeled single-seaters. In November 2010, Mahindra announced its entry into the 125cc class of the FIM MotoGP World Championship, positioning itself as the first Indian manufacturer to field a factory team in the premier motorcycle racing series.[7] Established formally in 2011, Mahindra Racing debuted its prototype racer, the MGP30, a 250cc machine designed for the newly introduced Moto3 category starting in 2012, developed in partnership with European specialists including Suter Racing Technology.[8] This initiative was housed within Mahindra's broader automotive ecosystem, drawing on the group's engineering resources to prototype advanced components and test performance under race conditions. The early focus on motorcycles allowed for relatively lower entry barriers compared to car-based series, enabling rapid iteration on aerodynamics, powertrains, and materials science applicable to Mahindra's road vehicles.[9] In its inaugural competitive season of 2012, Mahindra Racing contested the Italian National Motorcycle Racing Championship (CIV) in the 125cc class, securing the constructors' title through rider Vittorio Iannucci's efforts and marking India's first victory in an international motorsport event.[10] This success validated the racing division's integration within Mahindra & Mahindra, providing empirical data on high-speed durability and efficiency that informed subsequent expansions, including the shift toward electric racing technologies. The origins underscored a commitment to motorsports as a laboratory for causal engineering advancements, unencumbered by immediate commercial two-wheeler sales pressures.[11]Objectives and Strategic Rationale
Mahindra Racing emerged from Mahindra & Mahindra's broader ambition to harness motorsport as a catalyst for engineering innovation and international brand elevation, with initial formation in 2011 targeting the FIM MotoGP 125cc class (predecessor to Moto3). The entry was strategically motivated by the need to build advanced capabilities in two-wheeler powertrain and chassis design, leveraging the acquisition of Italian firm Engines Engineering to accelerate technology transfer to production motorcycles and scooters. This move also sought to amplify Mahindra's visibility in premium global markets, positioning the Indian conglomerate as a competitive player beyond its domestic utility vehicle stronghold.[12][13] The expansion into the ABB FIA Formula E Championship in its debut 2014–15 season marked a pivot toward electric propulsion, aligning directly with Mahindra Group's electrification roadmap, including a pledge to deploy 500,000 electric vehicles on Indian roads by 2025. Formula E served as a real-world proving ground for battery efficiency, regenerative braking, and high-performance EV systems, enabling rapid iteration that informed road-car developments like the Mahindra e2o and subsequent models. This rationale emphasized motorsport's role in compressing development timelines—often years faster than conventional automotive R&D—while showcasing sustainable performance to global audiences and regulators.[14][15] Overarching objectives include cultivating a high-caliber engineering ecosystem, as evidenced by facilities in Italy and the UK dedicated to simulation and prototyping, and forging synergies with group entities like Tech Mahindra for AI-driven race analytics and energy management. These efforts prioritize causal advancements in efficiency and durability over mere podium pursuits, with sustainability metrics—such as net-zero carbon certification since inception—reinforcing Mahindra's narrative of responsible innovation amid India's growing EV infrastructure challenges. Exit from MotoGP after 2017 refocused resources on electric racing, underscoring a pragmatic shift toward sectors with direct commercial applicability.[16][17][13]Motorcycle Racing Involvement
FIM MotoGP Series Participation
Mahindra Racing entered the FIM Road Racing World Championship in 2011 as the first Indian manufacturer to compete, fielding a team in the 125cc class with riders Danny Webb of the United Kingdom and Marcel Schrötter of Germany.[12] [18] The Mahindra MGP 125 motorcycle, designed and developed by Italy's Engines Engineering, debuted at the Qatar Grand Prix in March 2011, with the program's objectives centered on advancing the company's two-wheeler engineering expertise, enhancing global branding, and supporting expansion in India's motorcycle market.[12] Following the replacement of the 125cc class by Moto3 in 2012 under revised FIM regulations limiting engine displacement to 250cc four-strokes, Mahindra transitioned to the new category with the MGP3O prototype, continuing as a factory team through 2014.[19] The team operated from bases in Italy and India, emphasizing in-house development to compete against established European and Japanese manufacturers.[20] From 2015 onward, Mahindra shifted to a customer-supplier model, providing MGP3O chassis and engines to teams including Aspar Team and CIP, expanding to nine bikes on the grid that year.[20] A customer entry secured the program's first podium at the 2015 French Grand Prix.[21] Competitive progress accelerated in 2016, yielding three race victories and 13 podiums with the MGP3O, including the maiden win for Italian rider Francesco Bagnaia at the Dutch Grand Prix in Assen on June 26.[13] [22] Mahindra announced 2017 as its final Moto3 season in June of that year, providing full engineering and on-track support to customer teams through the campaign's conclusion before withdrawing to redirect resources toward electric vehicle racing initiatives aligned with the Mahindra Group's strategic priorities.[13] [21] Several riders nurtured through the program, such as Bagnaia and Jorge Martín, later achieved success in premier-class MotoGP events.[23]Other National and International Series
Mahindra Racing entered the Moto3 class of the Campionato Italiano Velocità (CIV), Italy's national motorcycle racing championship, in December 2012, fielding Indian rider Vicky Jain for the 125cc category as a stepping stone to international competition.[24] In the 2013 season, the team expanded its efforts, securing the Constructors' Championship with 201 points, surpassing Honda's 187 points, while rider Andrea Locatelli claimed the Riders' Championship with 167 points, ahead of teammate Michael Rinaldi.[25][26] This marked Mahindra's first major title in a competitive European national series, achieved through in-house developed chassis and engines tested against established manufacturers like Honda.[27] The team's CIV involvement continued into subsequent years, with partnerships enhancing performance; in 2015, a collaboration with Peugeot yielded a round-one victory at Vallelunga for rider Marco Bezzecchi.[28] By 2016, Mahindra supported a factory-backed effort with Max Biaggi, where Bezzecchi, entering as a wild card, won both races at Misano in the Moto3 class, contributing to the team's Constructors' title retention.[29] These results demonstrated Mahindra's engineering progress in adapting single-cylinder prototypes for high-level national racing, though the program wound down as resources shifted toward global priorities.[27] In parallel, Mahindra participated in the FIM CEV Repsol International Championship, a key junior feeder series for MotoGP classes, primarily through bike supply and supported teams starting in 2014. The company provided Suter-developed Mahindra MMX3-01 motorcycles to the Spanish Mahindra TMR Competición squad, with riders including 17-year-old Albert Arenas, a prior CEV race winner, and 15-year-old Stefano Manzi.[24][30] This effort extended into 2016 via the Biaggi partnership and 2017 with selective race entries in the Moto3 Junior World Championship category, aiming to nurture talent and validate technology for progression to world championships.[31][32] Mahindra's CEV role emphasized technical supply over direct team operation, yielding developmental insights but no championship titles, before full withdrawal from motorcycle racing by late 2017.[33]Formula E Championship Engagement
Entry and Inaugural Seasons (2014-2017)
Mahindra Racing joined the FIA Formula E Championship as one of its ten founding teams for the inaugural 2014–15 season, marking the Indian manufacturer's entry into international single-seater electric racing. The team operated under an Indian license from a base in Banbury, England, initially partnering with Carlin Motorsport to develop their chassis and operations. Their participation aligned with Mahindra's strategic push into sustainable mobility technologies, leveraging the series' focus on electric powertrains.[1][15] The season commenced at the Beijing ePrix on 13 September 2014, with Mahindra fielding Karun Chandhok and Bruno Senna as drivers in Spark-Renault SRT 01E chassis supplied by series organizers. Both drivers, experienced from Formula 1, faced challenges including battery management and unproven car setups, resulting in sporadic points finishes such as Senna's fourth place at the Putrajaya ePrix. The team concluded eighth in the teams' standings, demonstrating resilience amid teething issues common to the nascent series.[34][35] For the 2015–16 season, Mahindra transitioned to their proprietary M2Electro powertrain, enhancing energy efficiency and performance. Nick Heidfeld replaced Senna alongside rookie Felix Rosenqvist, bringing Formula 1 pedigree and fresh talent. Heidfeld claimed the team's maiden podium with third at the Beijing ePrix on 24 October 2015, while Rosenqvist's rapid adaptation yielded consistent top-six results, securing him third in the drivers' championship with 127 points. These achievements propelled Mahindra to a stronger mid-pack position, underscoring improvements in power delivery and race strategy.[36][37][38] The 2016–17 season retained the Heidfeld-Rosenqvist pairing, with refinements to the M2Electro yielding further competitiveness under increased regeneration limits to 150 kW. Rosenqvist repeated his third-place drivers' finish, bolstered by podiums in events like the Hong Kong ePrix, while the team amassed points through reliable finishes and tactical fanboost usage. Mahindra ended third in the teams' championship, their best result to date, reflecting engineering advancements and driver synergy despite no race victories.[39]Mid-Period Performance (2018-2022)
During the 2018–19 Formula E season (Season 5), Mahindra Racing achieved a competitive fourth place in the teams' championship, accumulating points through consistent scoring and podium finishes, including one secured by driver Jérôme d'Ambrosio at the season-opening Diriyah ePrix on December 15, 2018.[40] The team's performance benefited from reliable powertrain operation under the Gen2 car regulations, though it lacked race victories that season.[41] The following 2019–20 season (Season 6) marked a downturn, with Mahindra finishing ninth in the teams' standings amid challenges related to power output and reliability issues with the M6Electro powertrain. Drivers Pascal Wehrlein and Jérôme d'Ambrosio struggled for top-ten consistency, hampered by the season's abbreviated calendar due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which concluded with six races in Berlin in August 2020.[40] Mahindra experienced a resurgence in the 2020–21 season (Season 7), securing seventh position overall with 122 points, driven by Alex Lynn's victory in the London E-Prix Race 2 on July 25, 2021, and four podiums total.[42] The pairing of Lynn and Alexander Sims capitalized on improved aerodynamics and energy management in the M7Electro chassis, yielding eight Super Pole appearances.[42] In the 2021–22 season (Season 8), performance regressed again, with the team managing only one podium and finishing outside the top five in the championship amid ongoing development struggles under evolving Gen2 regulations.[3] Drivers Oliver Rowland and Alexander Sims faced stiff competition from emerging manufacturer teams, highlighting the need for powertrain upgrades ahead of the Gen3 era.[40] This period underscored Mahindra's engineering focus on sustainability and efficiency, though competitive results remained sporadic due to resource constraints relative to established rivals.[43]Recent Turnaround and Developments (2023-2025)
In early 2023, Mahindra Racing faced significant technical challenges during the 2022-23 Formula E season, including rear suspension failures that led to the withdrawal of its cars and those of customer team ABT CUPRA from the Cape Town E-Prix on February 25, due to safety concerns with the rear wishbone component.[44] [45] These issues stemmed from a design flaw affecting multiple vehicles, prompting a rapid redesign implemented for subsequent races like São Paulo.[46] The team also underwent leadership changes, with Frederic Bertrand appointed team principal in mid-2023 to oversee a three-year revival plan aimed at restoring competitiveness through improved engineering and operations.[47] Driver lineup instability marked the transition into the 2023-24 season (Season 10), as Lucas di Grassi departed by mutual agreement in September 2023 after one underwhelming year, citing mismatched expectations, while Oliver Rowland exited mid-season in October 2023 despite prior championship success, a decision not initiated by the driver himself.[48] [49] Nyck de Vries joined in January 2024, bringing experience from his 2023 Formula E title win with Mahindra's former partner team, though the season yielded zero podiums and low overall points, reflecting ongoing struggles with powertrain reliability and motivation issues amid a strained technology partnership with ZF.[50] [51] The team unveiled a new red, silver, and desert grey livery with a matte finish in December 2023, signaling a visual refresh ahead of Gen3 car adaptations.[52] The 2024-25 season (Season 11) represented a marked turnaround, with Mahindra securing fourth place in the teams' championship, amassing 186 points and five podiums—its strongest performance since early seasons—surpassing the entire prior year's tally within the first five rounds.[53] [54] Key factors included the stable de Vries-Edoardo Mortara lineup delivering a best-ever season opener with double points finishes in São Paulo on December 7, 2024, and technical upgrades to the Mahindra M11Electro on the Gen3 Evo platform, featuring revised aerodynamics, suspension, and an in-house powertrain for better energy management and acceleration.[55] [56] This resurgence addressed prior demotivation and partnership frictions, positioning the team as a frontrunner contender by mid-season.[51] Heading into 2025-26 (Season 12), Mahindra unveiled the next-generation M12Electro in October 2025, incorporating further optimizations for the Gen3 Evo's 600kW charging and 350kW power output, alongside a striking new livery emphasizing the team's Indian heritage with twin-peak motifs.[57] Preparations for the Gen4 era in 2026-27 are underway, with team principal Bertrand outlining ambitions to leverage Liberty Media's ownership for sustained growth, while test sessions like Chloe Chambers' November outing in Valencia signal expanded talent development.[58] [59] Despite no race wins in recent campaigns, the operational stability and points consistency underscore a recovery from near-exit speculation in 2024.[60]Drivers and Team Composition
Mahindra Racing operates from its headquarters in Banbury, United Kingdom, with engineering and operations centered there.[61] The team is led by team principal Frédéric Bertrand, a former FIA official who joined in November 2022 following the departure of long-time CEO Dilbagh Gill.[62][63] For the 2025–26 Formula E season (Season 12), Mahindra retains the driver pairing of Nyck de Vries from the Netherlands and Edoardo Mortara from Switzerland, unchanged from prior campaigns.[2][64] This duo propelled the team to fourth in the teams' standings during Season 11 (2024–25), amassing 186 points through consistent scoring and podium returns.[65] De Vries substituted by Felipe Drugovich during the 2025 Berlin ePrix due to scheduling conflicts.[66] Earlier seasons featured varied lineups emphasizing experience and potential. In Season 5 (2018–19), the team paired veteran Jérôme d'Ambrosio with rookie Pascal Wehrlein, the latter securing Mahindra's first pole position.[1] For the 2020–21 season, Alexander Sims and Alex Lynn drove the M7Electro chassis.[67] Felix Rosenqvist stands out among past drivers, contributing to the team's five career victories during his tenure in Seasons 2 through 4.[3] The selection strategy has historically included international specialists alongside occasional Indian representation, such as Karun Chandhok in the inaugural 2014–15 season, aligning with Mahindra's objective to promote motorsport in India.[2]Technical Innovations and Engineering
Powertrain and Chassis Developments
Mahindra Racing initially developed in-house powertrains for its Formula E entries, focusing on electric motors, inverters, and gearboxes to optimize energy efficiency and performance within regulatory constraints. The M3Electro, deployed in the 2016–17 season, incorporated proprietary power electronics that contributed to podium finishes, including Felix Rosenqvist's pole-to-win victory in the 2017 Paris ePrix, though reliability issues persisted due to thermal management challenges in high-demand races.[68] These early systems emphasized compact, liquid-cooled designs to handle the 200 kW peak power limits of Generation 1 cars, drawing on Mahindra's automotive engineering expertise from road vehicle electrification programs. In 2019, Mahindra partnered with ZF as its official powertrain supplier, initiating joint development of an electric driveline for the 2020–21 season while providing chassis support from 2019–20 onward. This collaboration enhanced motor efficiency and integration, aligning with the transition to Generation 2 cars featuring increased power outputs up to 250 kW. By committing to the Generation 3 platform in November 2020—the first manufacturer to do so—Mahindra advanced dual-axle powertrains, enabling front-wheel regeneration and traction for up to 350 kW peak power and improved overall efficiency exceeding 95%. The resulting M9Electro, tested extensively in mid-2022, incorporated these bidirectional systems to support Formula E's sustainability goals, including potential grid charging capabilities. Chassis developments remained constrained by the series' spec chassis from Dallara, constructed from carbon fiber-aluminum honeycomb composites for standardized safety and aerodynamics across teams. Mahindra's innovations centered on suspension tuning and minor structural adaptations, such as refined rear-end geometry in partnership with ZF to improve handling under regenerative braking loads. For the 2024–25 season (Season 11), the M11Electro introduced an updated in-house powertrain with revised aerodynamics, suspension kinematics, and rear suspension to boost downforce and stability in the GEN3 Evo configuration, aiming to address prior competitiveness gaps amid regulatory pushes for cost-controlled evolution.[69][70] These enhancements reflect Mahindra's shift toward supplying powertrains to customer teams, as seen with ABT's adoption in 2023, prioritizing scalable engineering over bespoke chassis redesigns.[58]Adaptations to Formula E Regulations
Mahindra Racing adapted to Formula E's Generation 1 (Gen1) regulations by developing proprietary powertrain components for its inaugural M1Electro chassis, homologated by the FIA for the 2014–15 season, which required teams to submit designs for approval to ensure parity in battery and motor specifications while allowing innovation in software and efficiency.[71] This marked one of the earliest instances of a team building a fully in-house drivetrain compliant with the series' single-make battery rules from Spark Racing Technology. Subsequent Gen1 evolutions, such as increased energy allowances to 28 kWh by Season 2 (2015–16), prompted iterative updates to the M2Electro and M3Electro powertrains, focusing on thermal management and regenerative braking optimization within homologation constraints.[72] Transitioning to Generation 2 (Gen2) regulations for the 2018–19 season, Mahindra shifted to the standardized Spark SRT05e chassis and Williams Advanced Engineering battery pack, but retained control over motor, gearbox, and inverter development to meet power output caps of 200 kW qualifying and 250 kW race modes.[72] A key adaptation came via a 2019 partnership with ZF Friedrichshafen AG as official powertrain supplier, integrating ZF's electric drive systems into the M5Electro and later M7Electro/M8Electro units to enhance torque vectoring and efficiency under rules mandating cost-capped development and restricted mid-season tweaks.[70] These changes aligned with Gen2's emphasis on fanboost elimination and attack mode introduction, requiring software recalibrations for energy deployment strategies. For Generation 3 (Gen3), Mahindra committed in November 2020 as the first manufacturer, developing the M9Electro powertrain with 350 kW peak power and 600 kW regenerative capacity, tested extensively in 2022 to comply with bidirectional charging mandates and higher efficiency targets reducing race lap times by up to 30 seconds.[14] Initial Gen3 deployment in 2022–23 faced reliability challenges under the new front-axle motor rules for enhanced regen, but the team iterated via limited homologation windows. The Gen3 Evo update for Season 11 (2024–25) saw the M11Electro incorporate all-wheel-drive activation for qualifying duels and select race activations, boosting acceleration to 0–60 mph in under 2 seconds while adhering to 40% increased energy recovery regulations.[73] Preparations for Season 12's M12Electro emphasize pre-Gen4 testing under FIA oversight, with development confined to predefined aero and power envelopes to maintain competitive equity.[74]Achievements and Competitive Records
Key Race Victories and Podiums
Mahindra Racing secured its maiden Formula E victory at the Berlin ePrix on June 10, 2017, with Felix Rosenqvist starting from pole and dominating the race to finish first ahead of Sebastien Buemi and Lucas di Grassi.[75] Rosenqvist delivered back-to-back wins later that season at the second Hong Kong ePrix on December 2, 2017, converting pole into victory despite a challenging street circuit, and at the Marrakesh ePrix on January 13, 2018, where he overtook Buemi in the closing laps to take the lead in the drivers' standings.[1][76] After a three-season win drought amid technical struggles, Alex Lynn ended the famine with victory in the second London ePrix on July 25, 2021 (Round 13), capitalizing on a late safety car period and superior energy efficiency to hold off Pascal Wehrlein by 0.410 seconds.[42] Official records confirm a total of five victories for the team across its history, with the remaining win occurring during the 2018–19 season amid competitive powertrain performance.[3][3] The team has amassed 29 podium finishes, including three from Rosenqvist in his 2017 winning streak and a resurgence in Season 11 (2024–25) with five podiums: Nyck de Vries third in Mexico City (January 2025), Edoardo Mortara third in Diriyah (early 2025), and Mortara's second place at the Jakarta ePrix on June 21, 2025.[3][77] These results highlight Mahindra's early dominance under Gen2 regulations and a partial recovery with the M9Electro powertrain in recent years.Standings and Milestones
Mahindra Racing participated in every Formula E season from the inaugural 2014–15 championship through Season 11 (2024–25), contesting 147 races and earning 1,142 constructors' points.[3] The team secured 5 victories, 29 podiums, 11 pole positions, and 10 fastest laps, while leading 285 laps in total.[3] Their constructors' championship results varied, with early promise giving way to inconsistency before a resurgence; the highest finishes were fourth place in Season 4 (2017–18) and Season 11 (2024–25).[1][63] Key milestones include the team's first podium, a third-place finish by Nick Heidfeld at the 2015 Beijing ePrix, marking an early breakthrough for the Indian entrant among original teams.[78] The inaugural victory came in Season 3 (2016–17) at the Hong Kong ePrix with Felix Rosenqvist, followed by two more wins that season and into Season 4, where Rosenqvist's successes propelled the team to its initial peak.[1] Additional wins were recorded by Jérôme d'Ambrosio in Marrakesh during Season 5 (2018–19) and Alex Lynn in London in Season 7 (2020–21).[1] In later seasons, performance dipped, with ninth place in Season 6 (2019–20), reflecting challenges in adapting to regulatory shifts. Season 11 represented a turnaround, with multiple podiums—including seconds by Nyck de Vries in Monaco and London, and thirds in Tokyo and Berlin—alongside poles, yielding the team's strongest points haul since early years.[1] No drivers' or teams' titles were achieved.[3]| Season | Constructors' Position | Notable Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| 3 (2016–17) | Competitive mid-pack | First win (Rosenqvist, Hong Kong) |
| 4 (2017–18) | 4th | Two wins (Rosenqvist); best early finish |
| 5 (2018–19) | Mid-pack | Win (d'Ambrosio, Marrakesh) |
| 7 (2020–21) | 9th | Win (Lynn, London) |
| 11 (2024–25) | 4th | Multiple podiums and poles; recent peak |