Prince William jokes about AI drivers as he squeezes into racing car at Jaguar HQ
Prince William visited Jaguar TSC Racingâs headquarters in Kidlington, Oxfordshire, today, where he sat in Jaguarâs I-TYPE 7 model and said his children love the sport
Prince William takes the driver’s seat as he visits Jaguar TCS Racing
Prince William joked that AI might take over drivers’ jobs as he sat in the driving seat of Jaguar’s Formula E race car. The Prince of Wales quipped that ‘AI drivers’ might eventually be “much quicker” as he was treated to a full tour of Jaguar TSC Racingâs headquarters in Kidlington, Oxfordshire.
The 6ft 3 heir to the throne, who towers over the typical race car driver, sat in Jaguarâs I-TYPE 7 model today, also his youngest sonâs birthday . He said during the visit that his three children, Prince George, 12, Princess Charlotte, 10, and Prince Louis, who turned eight, were “so excited” about their fatherâs tour of Jaguar racing HQ, adding that they ‘love’ the sport.
But speaking with graduates and interns working in the Oxfordshire complex, William warned that we “are probably not far off” the moment that drivers could get replaced by technology one day.
He said: “I was joking with the team that with all the advancements in technology and everything, at what point does the driver become a weak link?
“Imagine you turn around and just say âletâs just get rid of the driver, weâll put in an AI person and itâll do it itself much quickerâ. Weâre probably not far off that moment, are we – not that we should be going down that route obviously. But you guys are fractions of seconds, a tiny little gauge youâre trying to gain and get everything, itâs incredible.”
He added: “It is incredible what youâre doing, it really is. Itâs really exciting. And Iâm so glad the sportâs moved from those few years when it started trying to work out what itâs going to do, to where it is now. Itâs a hell of a leap you guys have made and I canât wait to see what youâre going to do in the next 10 years.”
As part of his tour, William was shown the teamâs cutting-edge technology to see how they are competing with other teams in Formula E. While on the engineering floor, he also quizzed the team about the companyâs trailblazing sustainability concepts and processes and how these “trickle down to the road” with Jaguarâs all-electric consumer car offerings.
Formula E is the fastest-growing motorsport series on the planet and is the first sport to be certified with a net zero carbon footprint since its inception. So far, Jaguar TCS Racing has taken more race victories than any other team, with 25 wins and a further 33 podium positions.
While sitting in their development race car on the engineering floor, the Prince chatted with Jaguar driver António Félix da Costa, the 2020 Formula E World Champion, about the specific controls and components.
He also spent time in the race strategy simulation room, wearing headphones to listen in while team orders were given to the drivers, after which he joked: âThereâs a lot of attacking going onâ.
While in discussions with Jack Lambert, the head of technical integration at Jaguar TCS Racing, William asked: âWhat does the future look like? Obviously, you keep breaking these new boundaries and this new ground, whatâs four years, eight years away in electrification?â
Mr Lambert, who showed the prince around, told him their focus was on going into their GEN4 car and âopening up the boundaries and conditions for the regulations for the next generationâ. âYou guys can race in quite close proximity to cities, canât you, because the noise levels are low, which is quite a unique feature,â William added.
Speaking to Phoebe Russell, 22, who is on the companyâs graduate scheme, he asked whether it was âeasy for you to find your wayâ into the male-dominated field, to which she responded that her father is passionate about it. He said the graduate programme is âcrucialâ because it is not a sport that âwomen naturally get [pushed] intoâ.
Speaking after Williamâs visit, Mr Lambert said: âHe was asking us about the futureâŠwhere do we as engineers want this to go, and thatâs a really interesting question to ask because we donât really know.â
Discussing the threat of technological development and AI drivers, he explained: âItâs a possibility now, but you have to ask yourself the question of whether itâs the right thing to do for racing.
âThe reason people love racing is competition, and competition comes when you stick a squidgy driver in the middle that has his own brain and thinks and reacts and has emotions, thatâs where racing comes alive.
âI think if you start to go down the path of AI racing, which is being done, it shows the ultimate performance of a piece of hardware and some software. Amazing demonstration of technology, but at the core of racing is the emotion and the sport that comes from having drivers.â
William was last seen earlier this week as he joined his father King Charles and other senior royals, including the Princess of Wales, to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of the late Queen Elizabeth.
William and Kate gathered for a Buckingham Palace reception with charities and organisations associated with the late Queen invited, including Cancer Research UK, the Jockey Club and the Army Benevolent Fund. Guests included some of the UKâs oldest citizens celebrating their 100th birthday on April 21, with the King presenting their centenary cards in-person.


