Rating
The tournaments will be submitted to FIDE for international rating and the English Chess Federation (ECF) for national rating. Games played involving a player FIDE-rated in excess of 2400 are ineligible for FIDE-rating
Has anyone checked that this approach is actually legal?
With the ECF rating system:
There is one proviso – events, or sections of events, are rated whole or not at all.
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https://www.englishchess.org.uk/how-to- ... ent-rated/
With the FIDE rating system:
5.1 ...snip... Except in case of force majeure, any game where both players have made at least one move will be rated ...snip...
- FIDE Rating Regulations (B02), Applied from 1 January 2022, Ch. 6, FIDE Arbiter's Handbook
I would first check with FIDE (via the IRO) whether or not it is actually permissible to run a FIDE rated tournament in which one player's results are discarded in their entirety because their rating is above a threshold set by FIDE to determine the minimum thinking time available per player per game, and the organisers want explicitly to use a faster time control.
Thinking about it, one way to do this legally it is to treat the above the threshold player as a filler. The ECF will happily rate the filler games, whilst FIDE won't be annoyed with them. This means that the above the threshold player will not be eligible to any prize or title from the main event, though, as that player has not actually taken part in that event.