
The race in Bahrain scheduled for March 13 was called off on Monday due to the political unrest that last week resulted in the deaths of six pro-democracy demonstrators.
Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has since vowed to do all he can to accommodate Bahrain later this year should peace return to the Gulf kingdom.
However, in a calendar that finishes at the end of November, there appears little room for manoeuvre.
One possibility that had been mooted was squeezing it in between the season-ending races in Abu Dhabi and Brazil, and potentially pushing the latter back to the first weekend in December.
It had been thought, though, the organisers of the Abu Dhabi race would not be willing to entertain the prospect of near-neighbours Bahrain hosting a rescheduled race so near to their own for fear of loss of revenue and exposure.
However, Mohammed ben Sulayem, vice-president of the World Motor Sport Council and president of the Automobile and Touring Club of the UAE, believes that "finding time in the calendar is feasible".
Speaking to The National newspaper, Ben Sulayem said: "Originally, Abu Dhabi and Bahrain agreed to have a big separation on the calendar to make the most of the exposure that a grand prix brings.
"However, this is an emergency and in an emergency we need to work together."
The WMSC are due to stage their first meeting of the year next week when the Bahrain GP is likely to be top of the agenda.
However, Ben Sulayem has confirmed a new date will only be found if Bahrain formally requests a new slot.
Given the ongoing crisis in the country, that may not happen, which means any request lodged at a later date would not be heard until a subsequent WMSC meeting in June.
"If a request comes from Bahrain, FOM (Formula One Management) has to find a place on the calendar and Bahrain has to agree to it," added Ben Sulayem.
"Then the World Council will need to approve it.
"What is crucial is Bahrain get their priorities right, and I believe they have done so.
"Stability is the most important factor at this stage but, once it returns, then we will push to bring the race back, because we know they would do the same for us."
Ecclestone, meanwhile, will not be charging the organisers of the Bahrain Grand Prix a penny for calling off the event.
It was widely believed Bahrain would still have to pay the annual staging fee of £25million, but Ecclestone has confirmed that will not be the case.
"The fee that is normally being paid for the event is not being paid," said Ecclestone.
"I am not charging them for a race they are not getting. Whether they are covered by their insurers for loss of revenues, ticket sales etc, I am not sure.
"But if anything is force majeure then that (the political unrest) is.
"It is similar to if an earthquake had struck - no one could have foreseen that a month ago."
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