The Mercedes F1 team is facing sharp criticism for signing a sponsorship deal with a company linked to the Grenfell disaster

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The Mercedes F1 team is facing sharp criticism for signing a sponsorship deal with a company linked to the Grenfell disaster
Lewis Hamilton, the Mercedes F1 lead driver.AP Photo/Luca Bruno
  • 72 people died when a fire ripped through Grenfell Tower, a residential block in London, in 2017.
  • Kingspan, a company whose materials were used in Grenfell, is now sponsoring the Mercedes F1 team.
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The Mercedes Formula One team is coming under sharp criticism from both the UK government and survivors' groups after it signed a sponsorship deal with a company whose materials were used in Grenfell Tower, a London apartment block that was devastated by a fire that killed 72 people.

Grenfell, in west London, burned down in June 2017. The fire that engulfed the building killed 72 people and injured 70 more.

The fire was, and still is, a flashpoint for tensions in the UK around the safety of high-rise buildings. The cladding and insulation used on those buildings have come under particular scrutiny.

This week, Mercedes, the leading team in the highest level of motorsport, unveiled a new partnership with Kingspan, an Irish building-materials firm.

Kingspan made some elements of the insulation used during a refurbishment of Grenfell before the fire, the BBC reported.

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The Mercedes F1 team is facing sharp criticism for signing a sponsorship deal with a company linked to the Grenfell disaster
Grenfell Tower seen during the UK's first coronavirus lockdown in March 2020.Andrew Redington/Getty Images

In a Thursday statement to The Guardian, Kingspan said those elements made up just 5% of the insulation of the building, and that they were used without the company's knowing. It also said it "played no role in the design" of the cladding blamed for accelerating the fire at Grenfell.

Almost as soon as the deal was announced, both Kingspan and Mercedes faced scrutiny, with the UK housing minister Michael Gove tweeting his disapproval.

"Deeply disappointed that Mercedes AMG F1 are accepting sponsorship from cladding firm Kingspan while the Grenfell Inquiry is ongoing," Gove said.

"I will be writing to Mercedes to ask them to reconsider. The Grenfell community deserves better."

Grenfell United, a group for survivors of the disaster, also condemned the move, describing it as "truly shocking."

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"Kingspan played a central role in inflicting the pain and suffering that we feel today, and there must be a degree of public censure for Kingspan's recklessness and carelessness for human life," the group said in a letter to Mercedes F1 CEO Toto Wolff.

The Kingspan logo is set to appear on the nose of the Mercedes car at the Saudi Grand Prix this weekend.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes' lead driver, though not directly involved in the team's sponsorships, has been implored by some to condemn the Kingspan deal. Hamilton has previously shown his support for Grenfell survivors, sharing a tribute to the tragedy on his Instagram page last June.

Kelvin Mackenzie, a former editor of the The Sun, said that Hamilton should "refuse to sit in the car" while it features Kingspan branding.

In a statement cited by the BBC, Mercedes F1 said: "Our partner Kingspan has supported, and continues to support, the vitally important work of the inquiry to determine what went wrong and why in the Grenfell Tower tragedy.

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"Our new partnership announced this week is centered on sustainability and will support us in achieving our targets in this area."

Later on Friday, Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff released a statement apologizing for the "additional hurt the announcement has caused."

"The work of the public inquiry to establish the full causes of the tragedy is crucially important. Prior to concluding our partnership, we engaged with Kingspan in depth to understand what role their products played in what happened at Grenfell," the statement said.

"Kingspan have stated that they played no role in the design or construction of the cladding system on Grenfell Tower, and that a small percentage of their product was used used as a substitute without their knowledge in part of the system which was not compliant with building regulations and was unsafe.

"I know that this does not change in any way the awful tragedy you suffered, or the deep adn ongoing pain felt in your community, and I would like to thank Grenfell United for the offer to meet in person for me to learn and understand better."

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