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FIA to review 2026 F1 regulations after Bearman's high-speed crash at Suzuka
29 March 2026F1i.comAnalysisRumor

FIA to review 2026 F1 regulations after Bearman's high-speed crash at Suzuka

The FIA will review F1's 2026 technical regulations in April after Oliver Bearman's high-G crash at Suzuka, which drivers blame on dangerous speed differences caused by the new cars' energy management systems. The governing body acknowledges the need to analyze real-world data to potentially refine the rules for safety.

The FIA has formally acknowledged that a high closing speed caused by the 2026 car's energy management systems led to Oliver Bearman's dramatic 50G crash at the Japanese Grand Prix, promising a structured review of the new technical regulations in April. The incident, where Bearman's Haas lost control avoiding a slower Alpine, has validated drivers' long-standing warnings about the dangerous speed differentials created by the new power unit rules.

Why it matters:

This crash represents the first major real-world safety test of F1's 2026 regulations, moving concerns from theoretical simulations to tangible track danger. It forces the sport's governing body and teams to confront a critical trade-off: balancing the pursuit of advanced, energy-efficient racing with fundamental driver safety, as a minor energy state mismatch can instantly create a hazardous, race-ending scenario.

The details:

  • The crash occurred on Lap 21 when Bearman, trailing Franco Colapinto's Alpine, faced a sudden 45 km/h closing speed as he approached Spoon corner.
  • Colapinto's car was not harvesting energy at that moment, meaning its rear-wing warning lights were inactive, leaving Bearman with little indication of the severe speed difference until it was too late for avoidance.
  • Drivers, led by GPDA director Carlos Sainz, have warned about this specific risk since pre-season testing, citing unpredictable energy deployment and recovery phases.
    • Sainz stated the crash was "only a matter of time" and expressed dissatisfaction with the current situation, calling for a safer solution.
  • In its response, the FIA confirmed the regulations contain "adjustable parameters" designed for post-implementation optimization based on real-world data, which the planned April review will now assess.

What's next:

The FIA has scheduled a series of stakeholder meetings in April to analyze data from the season's opening races and determine if refinements to the energy management rules are necessary.

  • Any potential adjustments will require careful simulation and analysis, meaning immediate changes are unlikely.
  • The incident ensures that driver safety, particularly regarding predictable closing speeds, will be a paramount concern in these discussions as F1 navigates its new technological era.
  • The outcome of this review could lead to tweaks in how and when the electrical energy boost can be deployed, aiming to reduce the risk of similar accidents.

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