2011 FIA Alternative Energies Cup
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The 2011 FIA Alternative Energies Cup was a season of the FIA Alternative Energies Cup, a world championship for vehicles with alternative energy propulsion organized by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. The season had eight rallies, beginning with Rally Montecarlo on 3 April.[1] For the final classifications, 50% rounded up of the best results plus one was taken into account.[2]
Calendar and winners cat. VII & VIII
Date | Race | Winner | Co-Driver | Car |
---|---|---|---|---|
April 3, 2011 | Monaco 5e Rallye Montecarlo | France Raymond Durand | France Bernard Vialar | Japan Toyota Auris |
May 8, 2011 | Belgium Clean Week 2020, Zolder | Italy Massimo Liverani | Italy Alessandro Talmelli | Italy Fiat Croma JTD |
August 14, 2011 | Iceland Rally Reykjavík | France Raymond Durand | France Bernard Vialar | Japan Toyota Auris |
August 27, 2011 | Spain III Eco Rallye Vasco Navarro, Vitoria-Gasteiz | Spain Txema Foronda | Spain Pilar Rodas | Japan Toyota Prius |
September 25, 2011 | Greece 5th High-Tech Ecomobility Rally, Athens | Italy Massimo Liverani | Italy Alessandro Talmelli | Italy Fiat Croma JTD |
September 30, 2011 | Italy Green Prix Eco Targa, Palermo | Italy Massimo Liverani | Italy Valeria Strada | Italy Fiat Croma JTD |
October 2, 2011 | Canada Rallye Énergie Alternative, Montreal | Canada Sebastien Kroetsch | Canada Eric B. Meunier | Japan Lexus CT 200h |
October 16, 2011 | San Marino 6° Ecorally San Marino – Città del Vaticano | Italy Roberto Viganò | Italy Andrea Fovana | Italy Alfa Romeo Mito |
Driver Standings cat. VII & VIII
Co-Driver Standings cat. VII & VIII
Manufacturer Standings cat. VII & VIII
Points | Manufacturer |
---|---|
92 | Japan Toyota |
84 | Italy Fiat |
76 | Italy Alfa Romeo |
46 | Japan Honda |
28 | United States Chevrolet |
26 | Germany Volkswagen, Japan Lexus |
18 | Germany Mercedes |
16 | South Korea Kia |
12 | France Citroën |
10 | China Gonow, United States GMC, South Korea Hyundai, France Renault |
8 | Japan Subaru |
6 | United States Ford, Japan Daihatsu |
4 | United States Chrysler, Germany Porsche |
2 | France Peugeot |
References
- ↑ FIA Alternative Energies Cup Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, in Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile.
- ↑ Coupe des Énergies Alternatives de la Fia, in Fédération internationale de l'automobile