10 July 2026

Bahrain clarifies F1 race plans amid UAE swap speculation

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Bangla Press Published: 10 July 2026, 03:43 AM
Bahrain clarifies F1 race plans amid UAE swap speculation

Bangla Press Desk:  Bahrain has not tapped its USD5.3bn currency swap agreed with the United Arab Emirates, the country's development minister told Reuters, and has also held talks about getting its Formula One Grand Prix back on this ​year's race calendar.

Bahrain has been among the Gulf economies most exposed to the fallout from the Iran ‌war, which erupted as the kingdom was trying to rein in one of the region's heaviest debt burdens.
Renewed Iranian attacks on the country over the past two days have underscored the difficulties.

Credit rating agency S&P Global estimates the impact of the conflict will result in a 3% contraction ​of the economy this year, alongside a fiscal deficit of nearly 8.5% of GDP.

"What has happened is unfortunate, ​not what we planned for," Bahrain's Minister of Sustainable Development and Chief Executive of the ⁠Bahrain Economic Development Board, Noor bint Ali Alkhulaif, told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday just as tensions began to flare ​again.

"It was meant to be a year of building the new Bahrain."
A recovery is already well under way, though, she insisted.

Big ​manufacturing and logistics firms have been finding alternative routes to the Strait of Hormuz, while the numbers of tourists coming from elsewhere in the region - which accounted for around 90% of last year's overall 15m total - are "pretty much" back to pre-war levels.

And despite concerns about ​a recent slump in its foreign exchange reserves that have left them at their lowest level since the COVID crisis ​at around USD3bn, Bahrain has not drawn on the UAE currency swap it agreed in April.

"Based on the information I have, it was not ‌exercised," Alkhulaif ⁠confirmed on Thursday, adding that she was also a board member of Bahrain's central bank, which secured the swap.

RACE AGAINST TIME

Alkhulaif also said the country was trying to get the Bahrain F1 Grand Prix, which was cancelled along with Saudi Arabia's race back in March after the war broke out, back on.
 

Hostilities between the United States and Iran would first need to ​ease again, but Formula One ​sources say the most likely ⁠slot for Bahrain is the weekend of October 3-4, between the Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku and the Singapore Grand Prix on October 11.

"There is the talks about maybe plugging ​in some of the races that were cancelled back into the calendar," Alkhulaif said. "No confirmation ​still on that, (but) ⁠potentially".

F1 experts say a decision will probably need to be made either way fairly soon to give the teams time to make the necessary arrangements.

A reinstated race would be a welcome boost. The weekend typically attracts around 105,000 spectators, with bigger-spending international fans ⁠usually accounting ​for roughly 10% to 15% of that total.

With Ramadan also set to ​be earlier next year, Bahrain also looks set to reclaim the prestigious opening race of the 2026-27 season and host the normal pre-season testing rounds, ​although the situation with the war will again be crucial.


 

[Bangla Press is a global platform for free thought. It provides impartial news, analysis, and commentary for independent-minded individuals. Our goal is to bring about positive change, which is more important today than ever before.]

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