The FIA, teams, and Formula 1 have agreed on tweaks to energy management rules ahead of the Miami Grand Prix, aiming to improve qualifying performance and safety. The changes, finalized on Monday, increase super clipping limits and reduce harvesting caps following concerns raised after Oliver Bearman's crash in Suzuka. FIA single-seater director Nikolas Tombazis described the adjustments as an evolution rather than a revolution.
After discussions involving technical representatives from all teams, the FIA and Formula 1 reached consensus on Monday for immediate changes to address energy management and closing speeds in the 2026 Formula 1 season. The primary focus is restoring more aggressive qualifying laps while enhancing safety, prompted by Bearman's heavy crash in Suzuka and prior races like China and Japan. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff emphasized the need for precise adjustments, likening it to using a scalpel rather than a baseball bat. McLaren's Andrea Stella had suggested raising the super clipping limit during winter testing in Bahrain, a proposal now implemented by increasing it to the full 350 kilowatts from 250 kilowatts for both qualifying and races. This should make speed profiles more predictable and reduce driver workload by minimizing unnatural energy recovery tactics, according to Tombazis. A second key change lowers the harvesting limit from eight to seven megajoules per lap, already trialed in Suzuka, with an estimated lap time loss of one second offset by two to four seconds from reduced super clipping reliance. The FIA can further reduce it for up to 12 races if needed. Deployment rules now cap electrical power at 250 kilowatts outside key acceleration zones and limit boost to 150 kilowatts when at zero power, aiming to prevent speed differentials that contributed to Bearman's incident. Tombazis stated these measures should avoid repeats of such crashes from Miami onward. For race starts, a new low power start detection system will trial in Miami, automatically triggering limited MGU-K deployment if abnormal acceleration is detected post-clutch release, providing a safety net without competitive advantage. Lando Norris of McLaren highlighted frustrations with current qualifying, where battery algorithms force drivers to hold back 1-2 percent, eliminating the thrill of maximum risk-taking. He noted incidents like his unintended overtake of Lewis Hamilton in Japan due to system resets. Tombazis acknowledged the competitive nature of the sport makes consensus challenging but affirmed ongoing monitoring post-Miami.