In an interview with Formula 1 website 'F1 Fan Voice' Formula 1's Director of Motorsports Ross Brawn is quoted as saying "I don't see Formula 1 necessarily being locked into internal combustion engines forever. Who knows where we are in 10 years?
"10 years ago I don't think many people would [be] able to predict where the world is now and therefore I don't know where we're going to be in 10 years' time. But Formula 1 will move in the right direction.
"There's nothing to stop us having electric Formula 1 cars in future. At the moment they don't deliver the spectacle."
The very last sentence in that quote will be as true in 10 years' time, or 20 or 50 as the spectacle of Formula 1 clearly involves noise and if the multiple fan surveys conducted since the introduction of the new power units in 2014 are to be believed, the more of it the better.
Formula E batteries will be improved over time, the reliability issues solved and all manner of improvements made but Formula E will still be just that - an electric powered silent formula (apart from the annoying slot car whine of the straight cut gears whirring around in the transmission) and as exciting and stimulating to the sensorial awareness as a toy slot car.
Exciting to drive, no doubt, highly skilled drivers competing with all the determination of any other top racing driver? Of course.
But electric cars as Formula 1 cars? Please no, never, no way, ever!
Thankfully the founder and CEO of Formula E, Alejandro Agag, quashed the Brawn notion immediately by pointing out that the Formula has an exclusive licence with the FIA for 25 seasons.