After his historic solar-powered trip around the world,
Palmer followed up by organizing the Zero Emissions Race. With the Zero Emissions Race, Palmer invited international teams to drive their own cars around the world. The only condition is that the energy used by each electric vehicle be offset by the generation of electricity via
renewable energy forms (sun, wind, wave, geothermal, etc.) at designated production facilities in the racers' home countries. Four teams took up
Palmer's invitation and, as of October 2010, they are in the midst of an 80-day EV journey around the world. The First Annual Zero Emissions Race began on August 16, 2010 in Geneva, Switzerland and headed east. After exactly 80 driving days, and 17 countries the race arrived back to Geneva on February 27, 2011. "With this race we want to show, that seven billion people on this planet need renewable energy and clean mobility", said Palmer. "Petrol is running out, and the climate crisis is coming... and we are all in running against time." The winner of the race (by points) became
Zerotracer. The event was sponsored by Canadian Solar, among others. Palmer is a strong advocate of electric vehicles and especially the electric vehicle + renewable energy mix. "People love this idea of a solar car," Palmer told the BBC outside the venue of the
COP14 UN climate talks. "I hope that the car industry hears...and makes electric cars in future." ==See also==