MotoE World Championship

The series is sanctioned by the FIM and the inaugural season in 2019 was due to support MotoGP at five of the European circuits.

[4] The inaugural season took place over 6 rounds between July and November 2019 with 12 teams fielding a grid of 18 riders.

The season start was originally planned for May, but had to be postponed because of a fire at the Jerez test in March where all competition bikes were destroyed.

Runners-up Matteo Ferrari and Dominique Aegerter also tallied four podiums including two wins each, but suffered from retirements and low classifications at the remaining races.

[13] Spanish rider Jordi Torres won the championship a second time, successfully defending his 2020 title.

MotoE World Cup logo from 2019 to 2022