
Pirelli Cancels Bahrain Wet‑Tyre Test Amid Gulf Tensions; FIA Monitors Middle East, Updates 2026 Rules
Pirelli pulled the plug on a two‑day wet‑tyre test at the Bahrain International Circuit after an air strike hit a US naval base just 30 km away. The incident has forced the FIA and Formula One Management to keep a close watch on the security situation ahead of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix. At the same time, the sport’s rulebook gets a busy week: a power‑unit compression‑ratio loophole is closed, Monaco’s controversial two‑stop rule is scrapped, and Q3 qualifying is extended for 2026.
Why it matters:
- Safety of staff and logistics for teams operating in the Gulf region.
- A rapid escalation could jeopardise the opening rounds, prompting postponement or a spectator‑less format.
- Closing the compression‑ratio loophole restores technical parity among engine manufacturers.
- Dropping Monaco’s two‑stop rule aligns the principality with the rest of the calendar, simplifying strategy.
- An extra minute in Q3 gives drivers more time to extract a perfect lap, tightening qualifying battles.
The details:
- Pirelli announced the cancellation on Friday, confirming its personnel will be flown back to Italy and the UK until conditions improve.
- The FIA said it remains in constant contact with local authorities and that the next three races (Australia, China, Japan) are unaffected.
- From 1 June, a new regulation fixes the allowable compression‑ratio range for all power units, a change unanimously supported by manufacturers, including Mercedes.
- Monaco’s mandatory two‑stop rule, introduced for 2025, is removed; the race reverts to a single mandatory stop in dry conditions.
- Q3 has been lengthened from 12 to 13 minutes, with the gap between Q2 and Q3 reduced to seven minutes; sprint qualifying stays unchanged.
What's next:
- If tensions rise, Bahrain and Saudi rounds could be postponed, relocated or run without spectators, though the FIA says any action will be safety‑driven.
- Teams will shift tyre development focus to other venues, using data from previous wet sessions to fine‑tune 2026 tyre specifications.
- The 2026 season will debut the revised technical and sporting regulations, with Monaco’s and qualifying changes likely to shape strategy from the first race onward.
Original Article :https://www.planetf1.com/news/f1-news-pirelli-tyre-test-cancellation-fia-fom-mon...





