London: The organisers of the British Grand Prix on Monday said that they are willing to host two consecutive races at Silverstone this season if required in an effort to help salvage the coronavirus-hit world championship.
So far nine of the 22 races have either been cancelled or postponed with the French and Belgian races tipped to join the abandoned list.
That would leave the Austrian Grand Prix on July 5 as the delayed season-opener with the British Grand Prix scheduled to follow two weeks later.
Red Bull consultant Helmut Marko told Austrian public broadcaster ORF on Sunday that the Spielberg track too could host back-to-back races with the second a two-day race during the week.
He said the track manager had already proposed to the government to allow a Grand Prix without fans with chances of its approval "very high". Sports Minister Werner Kogler announced this week he was not opposed to the Spielberg race being held without a crowd.
Marko, whose team is based in Austria, said F1 organisers were working on a concept of reducing the number of those on site and how charter flights could land at an airport near Spielberg from the UK where most of the teams are based.
Marko highlighted the "unpayable advertising effect" of Spielberg kicking off the truncated season though all those who enter Austria will have to show negative COVID-19 results to avoid quarantine.