London: The upcoming Formula one doubleheader at Silverstone have suffered a major blow as the United Kingdom government refused to hand any exemption to the elite sports and plans to introduce a 14-day quarantine period for those entering the country.
The measures will be introduced from June 8 to help curb the spread of coronavirus, but will be reviewed every three weeks meaning an agreement could still be found in time for the two races at Silverstone to go ahead in July.
F1 stressed the need earlier this week for a quarantine exemption by highlighting the impact the new rules will have on "tens of thousands of jobs linked to F1 and supply chains."
However, Silverstone managing director Stuart Pringle is hopeful that an agreement can be reached that allows both races to go ahead.
"I am very clear that the importance of the industry is understood by the government," he told a news channel.
"So I remain optimistic that a sensible and pragmatic solution, which puts the onus on the sport quite rightly to come up with the right solution, can be found." Seven of the 10 teams on the Formula One grid have bases in England.
"This isn't just 90 minutes of an exciting sporting race. This is about getting an industry back to work," added Pringle.
"This is about 40-plus thousand people's livelihoods being ignited.