Formula 1 team principals and officials gathered for a commission meeting last Wednesday to tackle key issues with the upcoming 2026 regulations, particularly the new power units. McLaren's Andrea Stella highlighted four major worries, including race starts, energy harvesting, overtaking challenges, and the use of straight mode. While some concerns have seen progress through testing, others remain unresolved ahead of the season opener.
The F1 Commission meeting focused on the 2026 regulations, which introduce power units more reliant on electrical energy, shifting racing dynamics toward greater battery management. Andrea Stella, McLaren team principal, had previously outlined three primary concerns following the first week of pre-season testing in Bahrain. First, race starts could become problematic without the MGU-H component, requiring drivers to rev engines for at least 10 seconds to spool up the turbo. Stella emphasized, "all cars to have the power unit ready to go, because the grid is not the place in which you want to have cars slow in taking off the grid."
In response, testing in Bahrain's second week included simulated starts with procedural tweaks to ensure fair preparation. Stella noted positive developments but acknowledged disparities in start performance.
The second issue involves "lift and coast" maneuvers at straights' ends to harvest energy, a point Max Verstappen criticized as "Formula E on steroids." The third concern is energy starvation potentially hindering overtakes, exacerbated on tracks like Jeddah and Melbourne with fewer braking zones compared to Bahrain and Barcelona.
A fourth issue emerged during the meeting: the deployment of straight mode—reducing wing angles for less drag—from the grid to the first corner. Stella reported general paddock agreement against its use at starts, pending FIA ratification.
On lift-and-coast, teams tested raising the 'superclip' from 250kW to 350kW, allowing full-throttle energy harvest without lifting. Stella said, "We successfully tested it today and we are happy," though the FIA will decide on implementation.
Driver criticism has grown, with Lewis Hamilton stating, "I had seven meetings in one day. It feels like we’d need a degree just to fully understand all of this." Ralf Schumacher dismissed such views, asserting, "These are the best drivers in the world. They have to manage it. Period."
George Russell called the backlash "premature," while Carlos Sainz urged the FIA and FOM to approach engine rules with an open mind. The season begins March 8, 2026, in Melbourne, where real-world tests will clarify these issues.
Stella maintains the changes preserve F1 as the "ultimate challenge" for drivers.