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Coolant fault caused Verstappen's Chinese GP retirement, Red Bull confirms
16 March 2026PlanetF1Race reportDriver Ratings

Coolant fault caused Verstappen's Chinese GP retirement, Red Bull confirms

Red Bull has confirmed a coolant fault in the energy recovery system caused Max Verstappen's retirement from the Chinese GP. The DNF highlighted a tough weekend for the team, with the car suffering from a lack of pace and tire degradation. Team boss Laurent Mekies expects a rapid response and better performance at the next race in Japan.

A coolant system failure in the energy recovery system forced Max Verstappen to retire from the Chinese Grand Prix, capping a difficult weekend where Red Bull's RB22 lacked pace against its rivals. Team Principal Laurent Mekies acknowledged significant performance shortcomings but expressed confidence the team will rebound quickly.

Why it matters:

Verstappen's DNF and the car's overall lack of competitiveness mark a stark contrast to Red Bull's recent dominance, highlighting the team's early-season struggles under the new 2026 regulations. Identifying and solving these reliability and performance issues is critical for the four-time champion and his team to climb back into championship contention after falling 86 points behind leaders Mercedes.

The details:

  • The terminal issue was an Energy Recovery System (ERS) coolant fault, which forced the team to call Verstappen to the pits on Lap 46.
  • The retirement compounded a weekend of poor performance, where Verstappen qualified eighth and struggled with excessive tire degradation and a lack of battery power at race starts.
  • Teammate Isack Hadjar managed to score Red Bull's only points of the weekend with an eighth-place finish in the Grand Prix.
  • Team Principal Laurent Mekies stated the package showed "significant shortcomings" in Shanghai but emphasized the team is learning rapidly from the issues.

What's next:

Mekies has set an immediate target for improvement at the next round in Japan, expressing expectation for a more competitive showing. The focus at Red Bull's campus is now on a major development push to understand and overcome the car's current limitations in both reliability and outright pace, a necessary step to close the large gap to the front.

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