Monday, 27 April 2026

More Than A Race: How Formula 1's return could transform Africa's motorsport future.

Kyalami Grand Prix circuit. 
PHOTO CREDIT: Kyalami/PR Worx
The conversation around Formula 1’s return to Africa is shifting decisively. It is no longer only a question of whether South Africa can host a Grand Prix, but whether the country can move with enough urgency and alignment to secure an opportunity whose sporting, economic, and developmental value is becoming harder to ignore.

Momentum has accelerated over the past year. Kyalami’s proposed upgrade path to FIA Grade 1 status, the standard required to host Formula 1, was approved in June 2025, opening a formal route for the circuit to become eligible once the required works are completed. At the same time, global pressure for Formula 1 to return to Africa has continued to grow, including renewed public backing from Lewis Hamilton, who has repeatedly said he does not want to retire from the sport without racing on the African continent.

For Wesleigh Orr, founder and head coach of WORR Motorsport, the significance of this moment extends far beyond symbolism. 

“South Africa has already proven that it can host events of enormous scale and complexity under international scrutiny. The Formula 1 conversation should now be less about whether we are capable, and more about how the right public and private stakeholders align to make it happen,” Orr said.

South Africa’s ability to deliver major sporting events is well established. The 2010 FIFA World Cup remains a defining example, with 309,554 foreign tourists travelling to the country specifically for the tournament, generating more than R3 billion in direct tourist spend. Those are not abstract legacy figures. They are proof that premium global sport can translate into measurable tourism and hospitality returns for the country.

More recent events reinforce that case. The inaugural LIV Golf tournament at Steyn City generated an economic impact exceeding R800 million, according to South African Tourism, again highlighting the short-term value that high-profile international events can create across the tourism, hospitality, and transport sectors.

“Major international sport is not just about spectatorship,” Orr says. “It is a tourism driver, a destination-marketing platform, a catalyst for jobs, and a powerful signal to investors. South Africa has already demonstrated that it can capture value from world-class events. Formula 1 would take that to another level.”

While circuit readiness has long been framed as the central obstacle, that narrative has evolved. With FIA approval for Kyalami’s Grade 1 upgrade plans already secured, the discussion has shifted towards execution, timelines and stakeholder coordination rather than theoretical feasibility. South Africa, in practical terms, now has a defined pathway rather than a distant aspiration.

Beyond infrastructure and economics, Orr believes the broader impact lies in what a Formula 1 return would mean for the next generation of African drivers.

At present, many of the continent’s most promising drivers are forced to look abroad early if they want to pursue serious single-seater development. The reality is that elite motorsport opportunities are still concentrated outside Africa, making the pathway feel physically, financially, and psychologically distant for many young drivers and their families.

Africa has not hosted a Formula 1 Grand Prix since 1993, when Kyalami last featured on the championship calendar, and it remains the only inhabited continent still absent from the Formula 1 calendar today.

“When Formula 1 only happens elsewhere, it can start to feel like the top of the sport belongs somewhere else,” says Orr. “The moment it returns to Africa, it becomes more real. It becomes visible, tangible, and believable for young drivers who need to see that this level of racing is not reserved for other parts of the world.”

That is especially important for South Africa’s own development pipeline. WORR Motorsport is already investing in structured coaching, training, and progression opportunities for young drivers. In that context, a Formula 1 event on African soil would do more than inspire. It would strengthen the credibility of the pathway being built around emerging talent and support the broader African motorsport ecosystem.

“Our responsibility is to ensure that when Formula 1 returns to Africa, African drivers are part of that story. That means sustained grassroots development, proper coaching structures, and competitive opportunities that help turn distant ambition into something practical and achievable,” he adds.

For Orr, the long-term opportunity extends beyond hosting a race. It lies in strengthening Africa’s presence across the sport — from drivers and engineers to technical operations and commercial partnerships.

“It is not only about bringing a race to South Africa,”
he says. “It is about building an industry, creating opportunity, and helping more young Africans believe that Formula-level racing is something they can pursue from a place of real proximity, not only from afar.”

As momentum continues to build, South Africa’s Formula 1 case is becoming increasingly clear. The event-hosting track record exists, the circuit pathway is more defined than it has been in years, and global appetite for a race in Africa continues to grow.
 And, the developmental case for what such a race could unlock for the next generation of African talent is becoming increasingly compelling.

“The question is no longer whether the opportunity is meaningful. The question is whether we are prepared to execute. Because this is bigger than one race. It is about economic value, global visibility, and changing Formula racing in Africa from a distant dream into a more tangible future,” Orr concluded.

Supplied By: PR WORX

Edited: Slipstream SA

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