
An aggressive move by the FIA, the publication of a statement asserting that they believed agreement had been met for compromise and that 'factions' within the FIA do not want to reach agreement, will most likely serve only to muddy the waters of the ongoing saga further.
A response from FOTA, whose members are believe to be meeting in London, is so far not forthcoming, and the FIA has promised to reveal details of its details with FOTA.
The statement reads:
"Last Thursday, the President of the FIA met a delegation from FOTA consisting of Ross Brawn (Brawn GP), Stefano Domenicali (Ferrari), Christian Horner (Red Bull), John Howett (Toyota) and Simone Perillo (FOTA).
During the meeting FOTA acknowledged that the FIA wanted to encourage the introduction of new teams in the championship to maintain its vitality and economic viability in the long term. Agreement was reached on technical regulations for 2010 which offered assistance for new teams from the currently competing teams in several key areas.
It was also agreed that the objectives of FOTA and the FIA on cost reduction were now very close and that financial experts from both sides should meet at the earliest opportunity to finalise the details.
It was proposed by the FIA that any perceived governance and stability issues could best be eliminated by extending the 1998 Concorde Agreement until 2014 thus avoiding lengthy negotiations for a new agreement. This was well received by those present who undertook to report the suggestion to the other FOTA members.
The FIA believed it had participated in a very constructive meeting with a large measure of agreement. The FIA was therefore astonished to learn that certain FOTA members not present at the meeting have falsely claimed that nothing was agreed and that the meeting had been a waste of time. There is clearly an element in FOTA which is determined to prevent any agreement being reached regardless of the damage this may cause to the sport.
The FIA will publish shortly a detailed and documented account of the facts in its dealings with FOTA."
That the FIA claim that the meeting had been largely successful is very much at odds with the opinion, at the time, of sources close to those involved, which were adamant no compromise had been met.
Written: Mon, 15 Jun 2009 10:43:12
[ Print View ][ E-Mail Article ]

- March 05, 2010FIA's Whiting to inspect McLaren wing
- February 25, 2010USF1 in deep trouble?
- February 11, 2010FIA - teams cannot miss races
- February 09, 2010Confusion over three race absence rule
- November 11, 2009N.Technology court case fails
- October 23, 2009Todt beats Vatanen to FIA presidency
- October 23, 2009Election day at FIA
- October 21, 2009Vatanen withdraws FIA legal action
- October 16, 2009Vatanen attacks Mosley tactics
- October 16, 2009FIA officials lobby for Todt - report

- (June 15, 2009)View all headlines from this date







