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2025 Extreme E Championship

Electric car racing season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 Extreme E Championship
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The 2025 Extreme E Championship,[1] promoted as The Final Lap,[2] was the fifth and final season of the Extreme E electric off-road racing series.[3][4] Planned in the aftermath of the failed 2024 season, it consisted of a one-off farewell event held at Qiddiya City, Saudi Arabia against the backdrop of the Tuwaiq mountains.[5][6] The double-header took place on 4–5 October 2025, days before the inaugural edition of the hydrogen-based, FIA-backed Extreme H World Cup.[7]

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Catie Munnings (left) and Andreas Bakkerud (right) won the last ever Extreme E race for Team Hansen.

Johan Kristoffersson and Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky won round one for Kristoffersson's KMS outfit,[8] while Catie Munnings and Andreas Bakkerud won the last ever Extreme E race for Team Hansen.[9]

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Calendar

On 6 September 2024, with only 4 of 10 races in its 2024 campaign completed, Extreme E announced the cancellation of its planned remaining rounds.[10] With the season on hold, founder and CEO Alejandro Agag stated the series was "reviewing alternative solutions" to fulfil its calendar.[11]

The attempts did not come to fruition and instead, on 4 September 2025, nearly a full year later, a one-off return was announced.[12] Scheduled for early October at an undisclosed location in Saudi Arabia, later confirmed to be Qiddiya City,[13] it served as a final send-off for Extreme E before it formally passed the baton to Extreme H.[14]

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Teams and drivers

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The year-long hiatus and imminent hydrogen switch resulted in a significant shakeup, with five of the eight teams being new.[15][16] Acciona | Sainz and JBX remained from the 2024 grid, the former with an unchanged lineup, while Carl Cox Motorsport returned.[17] All teams used one of the identical Odyssey 21 electric SUVs manufactured by Spark Racing Technology and consisted of a male and a female driver, who shared a car and had equal driving duties.[18] The event saw Yokohama replace Continental as tyre supplier.[19]

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Driver and team changes

Mid-season changes
  • After an accident in the first qualifying heat of round one, Molly Taylor was transferred to a local hospital for checks. She was replaced by reserve driver Claire Schönborn for the rest of the day and returned for round two.[34]
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Results and standings

X-Prix

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Round one

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Round two

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See also

References

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