A new powerboat endurance race in Normandy has been confirmed as a round of the UIM Endurance S3 World Championship, with the 24 Heures Motonautiques de Normandie set to run at Poses in the Eure from May 1-3, 2026.
The event is organised by Rouen Inshore Racing, a Norman powerboat club that has run circuit events at Poses on the Seine. The club has no connection to the Rouen Yacht Club, which organised the 24 Heures Motonautiques de Rouen until Rouen city council banned the race in August 2022 and subsequently filed for bankruptcy. Rouen Inshore Racing is an independent organisation.
The UIM calendar lists the Poses event under Circuit / Formula World Championship, Endurance S3 class, giving it confirmed world championship status from its opening edition. That is a different level of sanction to anything previously staged at Poses, where Rouen Inshore Racing has run domestic circuit events since the Rouen ban.
Three days, 24 hours, day and night
The format across the three days totals 24 hours of racing, split into sessions of 12 hours, 7 hours and 5 hours. The race runs day and night. Organisers have stated 15 international teams are entered. Mercury 4-stroke outboards are the specified engine, with Mercury Racing named as a co-organiser alongside Rouen Inshore Racing, the Fédération Française Motonautique, and the Cercle Nautique Rouen-Poses. The event is free to attend, with a partner village and public access throughout the weekend.
Mercury’s association with endurance racing at Rouen ran for decades. The manufacturer powered more overall winners at the 24 Heures de Rouen than any other engine builder, and provided real-time internet coverage of the race from as early as 1999. Its decision to attach its name to the new event at Poses as co-organiser reinforces that the 24 Heures Motonautiques de Normandie is being positioned as a serious successor rather than a stopgap.
S3 and the UIM framework
The Endurance S3 class shares governance with F4 under COMINSPORT, the UIM’s competent body for circuit endurance and formula racing. S3 and F4 have run as a double-header at recent world championship events, though only S3 appears on the UIM calendar entry for Poses at this stage.
A new venue on a familiar river
Poses sits on a narrower stretch of the Seine than Rouen’s île Lacroix course, set against chalk cliffs rather than the city’s historic quaysides. The venue has established itself as a circuit racing venue in its own right. The 24 Heures Motonautiques de Normandie is a new event with its own identity.
The circuit layout changes between days: Friday’s course measures 2,183 metres, while Saturday and Sunday use a revised layout of 2,091 metres.
Programme
| Session | Local time (CEST, UTC+2) | Your time |
|---|---|---|
| Thursday, April 30 – Pre-event | ||
| Team registration and technical inspections | 10:00-20:00 | |
| Drivers briefing | 19:00 | |
| Safety briefing | 19:30 | |
| Friday, May 1 | ||
| Technical inspections (continued) | 08:00-11:00 | |
| S3 Free Practice | 09:00-10:30 | |
| Race 1 (12 hours) | 12:00-24:00 | |
| Saturday, May 2 | ||
| Technical inspections | 08:00-10:00 | |
| Drivers briefing | 08:15 | |
| S3 Free Practice | 09:00-10:30 | |
| Race 2 (7 hours) | 12:00-19:00 | |
| Drivers briefing (Race 3) | 19:45 | |
| Sunday, May 3 | ||
| Technical inspections | 08:00-10:00 | |
| S3 Free Practice | 08:30-09:30 | |
| Race 3 (5 hours) | 11:00-16:00 | |
| Awards ceremony | 16:30 | |
All times CEST (UTC+2). Your time column converts automatically to your local timezone.
Entry List
The entry list carries some of the biggest names in international endurance racing. Team Inshore Performance arrive on Boat 1 as reigning UIM S3 World Champions, having secured the 2025 title at the decisive round in Mons, Belgium last August.
Boat 2 fields Peter Morin and Nelson Morin under Team Touax MRK Racing. Peter is a seven-time Class 3 Endurance World Champion who competes in F1H2O for the China CTIC Team and in F2 for Team RPM; Nelson is a multiple Endurance World Champion and a prolific winner of the 24 Heures de Rouen. Between them they won that event consecutively from 2013 to 2017.
Boat 5 carries Tullio Abbate of Italy, from the famous boatbuilding family of Lake Como. He won the Class S2 overall at the 2017 24 Heures de Rouen and took several world endurance titles with Team Abu Dhabi. Boat 13 fields Jean-Baptiste Thomas, UIM F4 vice-world champion in 2025, alongside Jérémy Brisset and Quentin Dailly, who together were part of the French squad that won the UIM World Circuit Endurance Championship. Boat 27 carries Alexandre Bourgeot, who races in F1H2O for Maverick Racing.
On Boat 38, two young Swedes with records beyond their years. Hilmer Wiberg, born in 2005, has accumulated 14 medals including three world championship titles across GT15, GT30 and 3J; he took European bronze and world silver in his debut F2 season in 2025. Adam Wrenkler finished third in the 2025 UIM F4 World Championship.
The following list is drawn from the official organisers’ document (version V4 bis, March 31, 2026). Nations represented include France, Belgium, Sweden, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Greece, Italy and Spain. For full driver profiles, see the dedicated entry list article.
| No. | Team | Hull | Pilots |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Team Inshore Performance | Molgard | Alexis Fischer (FRA), Loic Huet (FRA), Aymeric Troussel (FRA) |
| 2 | Team Touax MRK Racing | Moore | Nelson Morin (FRA), Peter Morin (FRA), Thomas Cleret (FRA) |
| 5 | Team Autovision | Molgaard | Philippe Karras (FRA), Jean-Paul Karras (FRA), Maitos Konstantinos (GRC), Tullio Abbate (ITA) |
| 6 | Team VSI Racing | Molgard | Michael Dragutin (FRA), Florian Girard (FRA), Florian Sévére (FRA), Jens Westphal (LVA) |
| 9 | Team Torpilleurs Racing | Moore | Pierre Lambert (FRA), Romain Nedelec (ESP), Alexandre Jean (FRA) |
| 13 | – | – | Antoine Boutrais (FRA), Jérémy Brisset (FRA), Quentin Dailly (FRA), Jean-Baptiste Thomas (FRA) |
| 27 | BRT Maverick Racing | Moore | Alexandre Bourgeot (FRA), Thibault Clement (FRA), Enzo Lethiec (FRA) |
| 38 | Monsnauteam | Molgaard | Benjamin Berti (BEL), Maverick Grolet (BEL), Hilmer Wiberg (SWE), Adam Wrenkler (SWE) |
| 69 | Akvashelf Racing | ASV | Toms Smilskalns (LVA), Niklaus Rimeicans (LVA), Nida Kilinskait (LTU), Paulius Stainys (LTU) |
| 86 | Slovakia Team | Moore | Simon Jung (SVK), Marian Jung (SVK), Vladimir Slany (SVK) |
| 87 | Club Motonautique Normand | Alicat | Paul Palenzuela (FRA), Bastien Masselin (FRA), Pierre Labigne (FRA) |
Getting there
The venue is the Rouen-Poses Nautical Club, Quai de Seine, Mesnil de Poses, 27740 Poses. Three public car parks serve the site: Parking 1 at the Mesnil campsite, Parking 2 on rue du Roussillon, and Parking 3 near Poses Church. Entry to the event is free throughout the weekend.
John Moore is the editor of Powerboat News, an independent investigative journalism platform recognised by Google News and documented on Grokipedia for comprehensive powerboat racing coverage.
His involvement in powerboat racing began in 1981 when he competed in his first offshore powerboat race. After a career as a Financial Futures broker in the City of London, specialising in UK interest rate markets, he became actively involved in event organisation and powerboat racing journalism.
He served as Event Director for the Cowes–Torquay–Cowes races between 2010 and 2013. In 2016, he launched Powerboat Racing World, a digital platform providing global powerboat racing news and insights. The following year, he co-founded UKOPRA, helping to rejuvenate offshore racing in the United Kingdom. He sold Powerboat Racing World in late 2021 and remained actively involved with UKOPRA until 2025.
In September 2025, he established Powerboat News, returning to independent journalism with a focus on neutral and comprehensive coverage of the sport.




