As Formula 1 teams complete arrivals in Melbourne for the Australian Grand Prix despite ongoing Middle East conflict disruptions—initially addressed by chartered flights—the FIA has relaxed curfew rules, a Bahrain tyre test was cancelled, and officials monitor upcoming races. Drivers express confidence in decision-making.
Building on travel chaos from the Iran-US conflict that prompted F1 to charter alternative flights via Tanzania and Singapore, most key staff arrived by Tuesday evening, with no teams reporting operational issues.
The FIA announced Wednesday it would not enforce curfew restrictions (Restricted Period One and Two) on Wednesday and Thursday nights at Albert Park, citing force majeure from travel and freight delays.
A planned Pirelli tyre test in Bahrain was cancelled after Iranian attacks on the US Navy Fifth Fleet in Manama; Mercedes and McLaren staff were safely evacuated and rerouted to Melbourne.
Upcoming Bahrain (April 10-12) and Saudi Arabian GPs remain scheduled, though under review, as does the World Endurance Championship's Qatar opener (postponed to 2026). F1 may explore alternatives between China and Japan races, but replacements are logistically challenging.
GPDA director George Russell said: “Ultimately, I think all of us trust F1 and the FIA just to make the right decision... if we don't, I'm sure there's plan Bs in place.” Carlos Sainz added confidence in F1/FIA information. Mercedes' Toto Wolff noted: “With the ongoing situation in the Middle East, it seems trivial to talk about sport... we know that the FIA and F1 will continue to monitor events."
The conflict's civilian death toll exceeded 1,000 per the Human Rights Activists News Agency.