A series of information sessions will be held to inform the public about Monaco’s gradual transition to clean energy.
The MTE (Mission pour la Transition Énergétique) will be holding the meetings under the umbrella of ‘Monaco Commits’. It comes amid the many questions that the people of Monaco have been raising regarding the National Pact for Energy Transition.
The objectives are to clarify and answer questions most commonly asked regarding the infrastructure, subsidies and solutions available to the public, as well as to collect more signatures for the National Pact for Energy Transition’s petition, and to involve local children by using play to educate them about alternative energy.
The events will be held from 29th May to 20th July, at the following locations:
– Wednesday, May 29: Carrefour Gallery
– Tuesday, June 4: Monte-Carlo Market (morning) and Parvis School St Charles (afternoon)
– Wednesday, June 19th: Princess Antoinette Park
– Tuesday, June 25: forecourt of the Oceanographic Museum
– Saturday, July 6: Condamine Market
– Saturday, July 20th: Promenade Larvotto
All events are free and all are welcome to attend.
Racing fever continues as we chat with David Brabham, son of racing legend Sir Jack Brabham, about his father’s Monaco GP win, the resurrection of Brabham Automotive, and the launch of his exciting new race car the BT62, currently on show in the Fairmont Hotel.
David Brabham
ML: This is a very special year for you considering 60 years ago exactly your father Sir Jack Brabham, known then of course as Mr Brabham, took out top place at the Monaco Grand Prix. What are some of the stories you remember him telling you about that race?
DB: Dad had very fond memories of his first Formula 1 win as it was in Monaco, the main prize in any Grand Prix calendar. His journey to that point was full of ups and downs, but his determination to keep pushing and improving his cars meant success was only a matter of time. One thing I remember him saying was how hot his feet got from the radiator being in front of his feet. He could hardly push the peddles and the pain was terrible, but as he was racing for the win he just kept pushing. He drove for just under three hours, a lot longer than today’s races in F1.
Jack Brabham in 1959 with the winning trophy, presented by Prince Rainier and Princess Grace
He accepted his trophy from Prince Rainier and Princess Grace, the most iconic members of the Princely family. Was that something he remembered fondly?
One of his best memories was receiving the winning trophy from Princess Grace, I think he had a soft spot for her! We still have it in the family and it is a truly wonderful trophy.
The Brabham BT62 is currently on show in the Fairmont Hotel
Are you commemorating that win with anything special?
Having the car in the Fairmont Hotel overlooking the famous hairpin is a celebration of my father’s success in Monaco. We have also been hosting customers at Silverstone this week and the livery on the car on track mirrors the livery on the Cooper that my father drove to victory in Monaco 1959. Given this year is the 60th anniversary of not only the Grand Prix win but also my father’s first F1 World Championship, we will be celebrating that success throughout 2019 with social media activations and at other events we will be attending such as the Goodwood Festival of Speed in July.
After making history in 1966 as the first and only man to win world championships as both driver and constructor in the same season, Jack’s success continued at Monaco 1967 when the BT20 driven by Denny Hulme took victory in a traumatic race that claimed the life of Ferrari’s Lorenzo Bandini… can you tell me what impact this had on your father?
One of the tougher mental challenges in those days were the deaths of his fellow drivers, it happened so often that I think the drivers of the day developed a way of just blocking it out and keep pushing hard. I had my own experience when I lost my team mate Roland Ratzenberger in 1994 at Imola, it wasn’t easy to just keep going, keep the focus without thinking about it, so I am not sure how they did it in those days.
Brabham Automotive
The Brabham legacy continues obviously through you, your son, your brother and nephew, not just through racing but you have also resurrected Brabham Automotive, which will return to international sports car racing with the 24 Hours of Le Mans 2021/22 season. Why is this an important championship to inaugurate the car?
Le Mans has been important for the Brabham F1 team as well as the Brabham family for over 50 years. My father won the only French Grand Prix ever to be held at Le Mans in 1967. My brother Geoff won for Peugeot in 1993 and I am a multiple Le Mans winner in GT1 and overall in LMP1. Brabham has always been a racing brand and we want to continue that legacy and create our own history. The BT62 has been designed as an endurance car and Le Mans is the pinnacle of endurance racing, so it all fits. We will be racing in invitational GT races in the lead up to a Le Mans programme as we develop the car further and build up a leading team that can compete for race wins and World Endurance Championships. If a Brabham can win Le Mans in a car that a Brabham has created, just like my father did, then we will truly have done something no other racing family will have done or will likely ever match.
The public can follow #brabhamroadtolemans – how important are fans for Brabham Automotive?
The public support since we re-launched Brabham has been incredible and the advocacy has been reignited by the launch of our Brabham BT62. Fan engagement will be an important and integral part of our racing journey and the team, as we bring Project Brabham to life where fans, drivers and engineers will be able to have much more access to a team. The public have been very vocal, they want to see Brabham racing again!
Tell me about the BT62 from a racing perspective…
The BT62 has been designed and developed as a GT car without restrictions. It weighs 972kg, generates 700 hp and 1,200kg of downforce and is propelled by a naturally aspirated 5.4l V8. It has endurance racing DNA. It is a performance oriented track car which is a demonstration of our fantastic team’s design and engineering capability. It is not currently homologated for any race series but we will be participating in invitational GT races in the very near future. It has shown its racing pedigree in Australia recently when it broke the lap record at the iconic Mount Panorama Circuit at Bathurst recording a lap time of 1.58.69. We only had 12 exhibition laps when we achieved this and we are confident we will take a few seconds off this time when we go back in November this year and have more time to attack the circuit.
Will it also be road legal?
Responding to customer feedback we have engineered a road compliant conversion option so customers can drive the BT62 on the road. This will require a split of regulatory and comfort changes which will include a front and rear axle lift kit, air conditioning, bespoke trim changes, locking doors, an immobilizer and more steering angle. Imagine the BT62 driving through the streets of Monaco!
What does the future look like for Brabham Automotive?
We are only at the beginning of the next chapter of Brabham and the future is exciting. We have commenced our testing for our race program. This will culminate in invitational races as we build towards Le Mans. We are in the process of completing the design of our next vehicle which will be a fully homologated road car – we can’t tell you much more about this at the moment other than to say, watch this space. As an organisation we are expanding to meet the growth curve we are on. We have recently brought people into the team from Ferrari, McLaren and Koenigsegg. What this tells you is that there are people external to Brabham Automotive who recognise what we see – the potential to come on an exciting journey with an iconic marque as we create our own history which aspires to be as rich as the heritage that has gone before – and what better place to deliver that message than Monaco on Grand Prix weekend.
Raoni Metuktire, a Brazilian chieftain who has become the poster boy for rainforest preservation, has made a stop in Monaco as part of his European tour. He met with fellow environmentalist Prince Albert II, who expressed his support in the fight to stop deforestation in the Amazon.
The meeting on Thursday 23rd May was the second of its kind between the two leaders, the first was during Chief Raoni’s last European visit in 2010.
Cacique (Chief in his native tongue) Raoni was born to a nomadic tribe in or around 1930 in the heart of the Brazilian rainforest. In 1954, anthropologist Orlando Villas-Bôas encountered the tribe and paved the way for what the natives called the “White Man’s Invasion”.
By 1978, deforestation was already a significant problem when the Jean-Pierre Dutilleux documentary Raoni was released, featuring an unpaid opening sequence with Marlon Brando. But real focus and support came later, in 1988, when Sting got involved and eventually founded the Rainforest Foundation along with Trudie Styler and Dutilleux, to help fund Raoni’s projects.
In 1993, the Chief’s dream of reuniting and protecting his homelands became a reality, thereby creating one of the world’s most vital nature reserves. His fight has not ended, though, and he continues to campaign to protect the rainforests and their indigenous peoples.
Top Marques: a spectacle of supercars inside Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum
Top Marques opens this week with an unprecedented number of world premiere supercars, limited edition models and technical innovations on display inside Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum.
No less than six world premieres will be unveiled by H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco at the opening ceremony in the Espace Diaghilev on 30thMay.
Amongst the vehicles making their debut on the world stage in Monaco is the Zacaria, the first ever street legal Formula 1 supercar all the way from Australia, as well as Perth’s Ferox Azaris, an off-roader designed for life on Mars. In avant premieres there will also be the McLaren Grand Tourer and a limited edition of the Aston Martin DBS Superleggera.
Visitors can also see the supersonic Bagheera 50 GTS, a concept superboat with a revolutionary design that will enable passengers to get to Corsica in less than one hour, as well as a brand new motorbike ‘Carbon Zero’ by L’Atelier du Gentleman.
“I am really pleased by the exceptional quality of exhibitors at this year’s Top Marques,” said Salim Zeghdar, CEO of Top Marques Monaco. “We have managed to amass an incredible line up of world premieres and extremely rare supercars that you wouldn’t see, side by side, anywhere else in the world.
“I want to treat visitors to a real ‘spectacle’ inside the Grimaldi Forum which they won’t see outside. The show, this year, is inside and not outside,” he added.
Innovative supercar Quantino 58Volt, powered by salt water.
Mr Zeghdar’s comments follow reports earlier this year that the future of Top Marques was endangered by the irresponsible behaviour of some motorists on the streets of Monaco during the 2018 edition.
“The events of last year were dangerous and could have not only resulted in injuries but also could have been the end of the show,” said Mr Zeghdar. “This would have been unfair since most of the troublemakers did not even visit the show. We have been working with the authorities to ensure that events like those of 2018 will not happen again, and that Top Marques lasts for another 15 years, or more.”
As a result, a number of new regulations have been made, including fines of up to €1,000 and license suspension.
Other highlights being organised to animate this year’s show, sponsored by Barclays Bank, include a ‘live’ tour of the Supercar Hall by two of the automobile industry’s most influential vloggers, Shmee150 and POG.
The supercar influencers will be present at Top Marques at 10.30am on Saturday 1st June where they will broadcast their visit to their followers, which amount to more than two million fans across Europe. Visitors will then be available to meet and take ‘selfies’ with the two vloggers in a specially designated ‘Selfie’ corner.
For this new Top Marques visitors will be able to see and buy exceptional pieces presented by exclusive brands from the Haute Horlogerie and Haute Joaillerie industries.
There will also be a Private Terrace for VIP ticket holders and guests as well as an invitation-only event organised for the final day of the show, on Monday 3rd June.
“We are excited to be the lead sponsor of this unique event that will focus on luxury, innovation, and green technology,” said Jean-Christophe Gérard, global head of investments for Private Bank and Overseas Services and head of Private Bank EMEA. “Barclays Private Bank is built on a deep understanding of our clients’ passions and long-term goals. This, coupled with nearly a century of experience in Monaco, allows us to offer the right expertise, opportunities, solutions and networks to support our clients.”
The Global Antibiotic Research and Development Assembly (GARDP) announced this week the contribution made on behalf of the government of Monaco to back their programme to keep sepsis in check in South African newborns, at the 72nd World Health Assembly in Geneva.
The funding will assist with the advancement of new antibiotic treatments as well as helping to create a database to improve overall medical care and, specifically, the effectiveness of antibiotics in the care of newborns and children. South Africa will be the testing ground and their findings will be used to improve treatments globally.
“Monaco is delighted to be part of the concert of countries supporting this GARDP initiative,” said Bénédicte Schutz, Director of International Cooperation of the Prince’s Government.
Communicable disease is the main cause of infant and child mortality and disability worldwide. Of the total, upward of 50% of all child deaths under the age of five are in newborn babies (up to 28 days). Drug-resistant strains of infection cause over 200,000 neonatal deaths per year. The situation is made worse by the increase in antimicrobial resistance, which is a major problem in South Africa.
“The reduction of infant mortality remains an axis of priority intervention of the official development aid of the Principality, and we are happy that South Africa, a partner country of the Monegasque Cooperation, is at the heart of this initiative,” said Mr Schutz.
All the headlines and highlights from Monaco, direct to you every morning