Monaco reveals first ever emergency unit for e-vehicles  

As electric vehicles increase in popularity, Monaco has introduced a new processing unit that will help protect first responders and the population in the case of a fire.

In this brave new world of alternative energy vehicles, there are a huge amount of positives. These energy-efficient, low-emission cars, trucks, two wheelers and boats are the way forward, but this doesn’t mean they have zero risk associated.

In the case of an emergency situation, notably when a battery pack catches fire or otherwise malfunctions, special procedures need to be followed to prevent a threat to not only the people working to fix the problem, but to the public-at-large.

Now, if there is a problem with a battery pack on a public or private vehicle, Monaco has the ability to handle the incident safely and quickly thanks to a treatment box which has been installed temporarily at the Fontvieille Rescue Centre.

Developed by the Monaco Fire Brigade in collaboration with Sulitec Group, the box was designed on the basis of a maritime container and responds to the operational concept that can be summed up using the theme of Isolate – Check – Treat. This chamber, unique in the world, is instrumented and intelligent and is insulated to withstand temperatures of up to 1,100°C.

The way it works is that when a problem occurs, an insulating cover is used to protect workers from electrical risks, as well as isolating the possible poisonous gasses emitting from the vehicle.

The vehicle is then transported by tow truck to the isolation box using a winch. The box makes it possible to treat the gases released by the faulty batteries as well as any liquid effluents resulting from the incident.

In this box, equipped with thermal insulation walls and multiple sensors, an automatic extinguishing device based on solid microparticles is triggered at a predefined temperature in order to stop any runaway chemical reaction.

Photo by Manuel Vitali, Government Communication Department

The unveiling ceremony was held on 25th May with Minister of the Interior Patrice Cellario, Senior Public Force Commander Colonel Tony Varo, Head of the Fire Brigade of Monaco Lieutenant-Colonel Maxime Yvrard, and Serge Deschamps, Technical and Commercial Manager of the Sulitec Group.

Its commissioning is fully in line with the local precept of “Safe-City” and responds to the risks associated with the development of alternative energy vehicles in the Principality, which currently represents 12% of the registered car fleet.

It will contribute to maintaining a high level of security while promoting the energy transition. During Grand Prix periods, this concept makes it possible to offer an operational response to the specific risk presented by hybrid vehicles and therefore to raise the level of safety during events that have no equal on other circuits.

Now that Grand Prix is over, the box is to be relocated to a new permanent home in the Principality for convenient use throughout the country.

Top photo by Manuel Vitali, Government Communication Department

 

 

 

Large fire breaks out in Monaco

Thick plumes of black smoke rose above Monaco on Monday after a fire broke out among a group of scooters at the intersection of avenue d’Ostende and avenue de la Costa. No injuries have been reported.

The blaze began around midday when, according to early information, six scooters and a MonaBike caught fire.

The exact cause is yet to be revealed.

The bikes were parked at the intersection of avenue d’Ostende and avenue de la Costa.

Authorities say there were no injuries. Traffic was diverted as firefighters brought the blaze under control.

Photo by Monaco Life

 

 

Mairie hosting World Environment Day bash

World Environment Day is coming up and to celebrate the Mairie will be throwing an eco-party in Princesse Antoinette Park filled with booths, workshops and fun.

Since 1973, World Environment Day, led by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), has held firm to its mission to raise awareness about planetary issues in need of urgent attention.

For almost five decades, millions of people have taken part in the yearly events, every single one doing a small part to facilitate bigger change and bring environmental causes such as climate change, marine pollution, wildlife crime, and sustainable consumption to the forefront of national and international policymaking.

This year, the Maire of Monaco, led by Marjorie Crovotto, Deputy Mayor in Charge of the Living Environment the Environment and Sustainable Development, will be holding a day-long event at Princesse Antoinette Park using this year’s World Environment Day theme of Only One Earth.

“Harmony” is the buzzword for the day, symbolically linking the ties between man and Earth, therefore the day will feature several informative and fun events set in the beautiful surroundings of the park.

There will be several stands set up, including one from the park’s gardeners, where they will demonstrate the olive tree “in all its states”, showing how the wood is recycled, how the tree grows, and giving out samples of the 2021 batch of oil made from the trees.

The Monaco Media Library will be exhibiting a selection of works related to the environment and will showcase its new grain library, and the Ecopolis Association will invite visitors to taste natural infusions, discover a composter that can be made at home called a vermicompost, and will speak on climate change.

The Mission for Energy Transition (MTE) will also be on hand promoting the National Pact for Energy Transition in order to raise awareness among young generations on how to contribute concretely to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. Finally, the Monegasque Sanitation Society will highlight essential information on the subject of recycling.

Workshops will stem from the Ecole Supérieure d’Arts Plastiques Pavillon Bosio who will hold an artistic event giving the public a chance to create a lithograph from a drawing of the park’s olive trees whilst also promoting the benefits of the using nature as the subject of art.

Local association Les Petits Ecoliers de Monaco will offer its third eco-fun workshop for children aged six to 10, where they will create their own vegetable gardens using recycled containers such as egg boxes or yoghurt pots. Four sessions are scheduled at 10 am, 11am, 1pm, and 2pm. Registration is required for a spot, and can be done by ringing 06 80 86 41 52.

The “Ecology of the Body” workshop will be led by naturopath Thierry Villette and will consist of a one-hour contemplative walk focused on the harmony of the body. It will aim to show participants how to understand the relationship between well-being and nature. Three sessions are scheduled at 10:15am, 12pm and 1pm. To book a space, email jbonnin@mairie.mc

Additionally, there is the Leave your Print workshop, referencing carbon footprints, where each visitor will be able to affirm their commitment to the fight against climate change by putting their thumbprint on a large drawing representing leaves.

Finally, there will be an eco-themed treasure hunt taking place in eight stages, using riddles, rebuses, charades and other fun games, suitable for the whole family to enjoy together.

World Environment Day will run from 10am to 3pm on Saturday 4th June. Access to Princesse Antoinette Park is free, though reservations for workshops are needed.

 

Photo source: Mairie de Monaco

 

 

 

James helps Roca Team rediscover their magic touch

An incredible overtime victory in the final second of AS Monaco Basketball’s Betclic Elite play-off second-leg against Strasbourg takes the series to a decider at the Salle Gaston Médécin on Monday.

Saturday’s match in Strasbourg was a do-or-die moment in their season. Defeat would have seen them finish a promising domestic campaign with a whimper. For large swathes of the match, the game looked beyond Sasa Obradovic’s men, but having taken their opponents to overtime, the class of Mike James shone through to take them over the line.

After two tight quarters, in which neither side managed to pull away, Strasbourg and Monaco went back into the dressing rooms level-pegging. The second two-quarters were more fluctuating with both sides taking the ascendancy in different moments.

It was Strasbourg who grew their lead in the third-quarter, leaving them on the brink of qualification for the Betclic Elite semi-finals, but Monaco, who finished second during the regular season, still had fight left in them.

Apart from a general increase in intensity from Obradovic’s men, the most discernible difference from Wednesday’s limp display at the Salle Gaston Médécin was the presence of James, whose ability can be decisive at any moment.

James’ driving run into the key and pass to Will Thomas tied the scores in the final seconds of the final-quarter to take the game into overtime. Thereafter it was a James masterclass, as he scored 13 of Monaco’s 19 points. Two three-pointers from the American point guard without reply opened-up a healthy gap, before another on the swivel grew the gap to nine (80-89).

Strasbourg looked down and out, but as their manager Lassi Touvi told Monaco Life on Wednesday, his team are full of “hungry and humble” underdogs, who thrive best when they are written off.

12 points behind with under 1:30 left of the clock, Strasbourg launched a full offensive assault, overwhelming Monaco. With only six seconds left on the clock, a three-pointer levelled the scores (95-95), sending the home crowd at the Rhénus Sport into raptures.

Cometh the hour, cometh the man. James, from his own baseline, dribbled the length of the court, crept into the key and launched a two-pointer, finding the hoop with just 0.4 seconds left before the final buzzer.

Victory for Monaco (95-97) means they take the series to a deciding tie at the Salle Gaston Médécin on Monday. Obradoivc’s men will not only have home advantage, but also the momentum as they seek to end their season with a piece of silverware.

 

 

Photo source: AS Monaco Basketball

 

 

Heartbreak for Leclerc as Perez secures first Monaco Grand Prix victory

Charles Leclerc’s tough run at his home Grand Prix continued as a comfortable victory slipped from his grasp on a drying track at a heavily rain-delayed Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday.

Starting on pole position is usually only half the job, but in the tight streets of Monte-Carlo it means so much more. Pole-sitter Leclerc was therefore ideally placed to break the “curse” and finally not only finish a home GP, but win it.

The meteorological gods had different ideas come Sunday. Just minutes before lights-out, rain started to fall on the circuit, which initially led to a nine-minute delay to the race. What was seemingly a passing shower intensified and eventually lead to a delay of over an hour.

When proceedings did eventually get underway, they did so under the safety car, as it became quickly apparent that there would be no standing start. Another perilous element of the race was therefore removed, so long as Leclerc kept his nose clean and his strategy didn’t fail him, then that all-elusive Monaco victory would surely be his.

But on a drying track, Ferrari let the race slide. In a position which allowed risks to be taken, Red Bull, seeing the pace of Pierre Gasly in the mid-field, made the change to intermediate tyres early. By the time Ferrari responded just a matter of laps later it was already too late; the undercut had worked a treat and Perez sailed past to take control of the race.

Things would get even worse for the Monégasque driver. A team radio mix-up saw Leclerc pit again just two laps later for a set of slick tyres, which led to the frustrated driver letting out an expletive-ridden message from his cockpit.

Leclerc gave his insight into the costly radio conversations post-race. “The last message I had was not clear because I was told to come in and then to stay out, but by that point, I was already in the pits and that’s when I let it out on radio because I knew it was done,” he said.

When he left the pits, he had not only lost the lead, but also found himself outside of the podium positions, as Max Verstappen marginally filtered in ahead of him following his stop for mediums.

There would not be another round of pit stops. If Leclerc was to break the curse that loomed over him like the dark grey clouds that clung to the cliffs of Monaco, he would have to do it the hard way. Upon realisation of that fact, he could only muster a sarcastic “perfect” over team radio.

It was nonetheless clear that Ferrari had the pace over Red Bull, and Sainz immediately closed to within a second of Perez, before a huge whack of oversteer on the start/finish straight saw the Spaniard fall back.

Just as the race looked to be finally settling down into a rhythm, Mick Schumacher was lucky to come out unscathed after a huge shunt in the La Piscine section left his car in two pieces. The safety car quickly turned into a red flag, as the cars returned to the pit lanes for the second time.

Jumping out of the car to get a breather, the image of a disconsolate Leclerc shaking his head at the back of his Ferrari garage was a sign of a defeated driver, who knew that the victory was out of reach.

When the race restarted, both Ferrari’s put on the hard tyres to contrast the strategy of the two Red Bull drivers in the hope that they could outpace and ultimately overtake them towards the end. There was, however, an unsaid pessimism, the well-documented difficulties of overtaking at Monaco meant that the Ferrari team were banking on more rain to save them from their predicament.

But it never came. The top four drivers (Perez, Sainz, Verstappen, Leclerc) came home line astern, Ferrari’s superior pace ultimately counting for nothing in the streets where track position still reigns supreme. Whilst the tears flowed on the podium as Perez savoured an emotional first victory around the streets of Monaco, the contrasting image of Leclerc trudging back to the paddock alluded to what could have been for the Monégasque, whose dream home victory still eludes him.

And once again, it was factors outside of his control that stole the victory away from Leclerc. He reflected on the questionable strategic calls post-race: “Let down is not the word, sometimes mistakes happen but there have been too many mistakes both today and overall, and in these conditions, you can only rely on what the team can see,” Leclerc began.

“I’m used to going back disappointed but we cannot do that, especially in a moment where we are extremely strong. We cannot lose points like this. I love my team. We will come back stronger, but it hurts a lot.”

Leclerc maintains his second position in the driver’s standings, but now trails Verstappen by nine points, whilst winner Perez has closed within just six points of the Monégasque. After a mechanical problem in Barcelona and disappointment on home turf, Leclerc will be looking to bounce back in two weeks’ time in Baku, Azerbaijan.

 

 

Photo credit: Scuderia Ferrari Press Centre

 

 

 

Has Leclerc broken the home “curse”?

A dramatic red flag in Q3 dramatically secured Charles Leclerc pole position for consecutive seasons at his home race in Monte-Carlo, as Carlos Perez’s crash prematurely ended the session.

Last year it was Leclerc who brought out the red flag to secure pole position, as he crashed on his second flying lap, before he was cruelly deprived of the chance to race on the Sunday. There will be no such issues this year, as the Monégasuqe endeavours to break his curse at Monaco.

At the time the red flag came out, Leclerc was set to better the 1:11.376 that he had set earlier in the session; he was simply in a league of his own as he has been throughout the weekend thus far.

Having prevailed in the most important qualifying session of the year, Leclerc now has not only the chance to finish his first Monaco Grand Prix, but to win it.

GP MONACO F1/2022 – SABATO 28/05/2022
credit: @Scuderia Ferrari Press Office

The Monégasuqe will also have the luxury of having his rear-gunner well-positioned. Carlos Sainz will start from second, so long as the damage he sustained when he hit the stranded Perez can be fixed in time.

Perez will begin third, a disappointing result in the context of a weekend where he has looked quick, even more so than team-mate and Leclerc’s closest challenger Max Versatppen. It is the Dutchman who was perhaps the biggest loser of the day as his second flying lap was halted by the red flags. He will therefore begin in fourth.

The reigning world champion has his work cut out to catch the runaway Ferraris. In Barcelona, Ferrari believed they had found the solution to their race pace issues, which were linked to tyre degradation.

Those upgrades, coupled with the fact that it is notoriously difficult to overtake in the narrow streets of Monte-Carlo, especially with the wider cars this year, will mean that Leclerc will go into Sunday as the hot favourite. That Monte-Carlo curse could finally be put to bed.

SEE ALSO:

Interview with Charles Leclerc: “I don’t believe in bad luck”

 

Photo source: Scuderia Ferrari Press Office