Qatar Tribune

FIA agrees to F1 budget cap of $145m for 2021

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SPENDING by Formula One teams will be capped at $145 million in 2021 with a subsequent limit of $135 million by 2023, it was announced on Wednesday as the sport’s rulers attempted to stem the bleeding from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The FIA’s World Motor Sports Council ratified the amendments to F1’s rules in a season decimated by COVID-19 with 10 of the scheduled 22 races already either cancelled or postponed.

From 2021, costs will be capped at $145 million (132 million euros) with a limit of $140m for 2022 and $135m for 2023-2025, based on a 21-competitio­n season, said a FIA statement.

Before the pandemic struck, a spending cap of $175m was set to be introduced next year in a bid to help even up the competitio­n.

“The World Motor Sport Council has approved further changes to the regulation­s governing the FIA Formula One World Championsh­ip primarily due to the ongoing need to reduce costs and safeguard the sport in light of the COVID-19 pandemic,” added the statement.

As well as a budget cap, the FIA also agreed to a host of changes to technical and sporting regulation­s.

“Formula 1 wins today,” said Zak Brown, the chief executive of McLaren.

“This is a crucially important moment for our sport. F1 has been financiall­y unsustaina­ble for some time, and inaction would have risked the future of F1 and its participan­ts.”

On Tuesday, McLaren, who also make supercars, said it planned to cut 1,200 jobs and significan­tly scale down its racing division after the coronaviru­s crisis hit sales.

British media reports said about 70 of the racing team’s 800 jobs will be eliminated by the restructur­ing plan.

Earlier this month, F1’s managing director Ross Brawn had warned of a “tragedy” if financiall­y struggling teams were forced out of business.

The 2020 Formula One season is due to get underway in Austria with back-toback races on July 5 and 12.

 ??  ?? “Formula 1 wins today,” said Zak Brown, the chief executive of McLaren.
“Formula 1 wins today,” said Zak Brown, the chief executive of McLaren.

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