Let's start with some hypothetical figures at WOT, 10,500rpm.
Crankshaft power - 450kW
MGUH power - 70kW
This 70kW can be sent directly to the MGUK to make a total of 520kW. Of course the rules allow a max of 120kW to the MGUK so if the batteries are charged another 50kW could be drawn from the batteries to give a total of 570kW to the wheels. So this is the maximum available for propelling the car. Or is it?
What if we have a waste-gate that can be opened to reduce back pressure on the ICE while still producing sufficient boost by driving the compressor with the MGUH? What if the crankshaft power under these conditions is now 470 kW due to the reduced pumping loss in the exhaust stroke? We would then have 470kW plus 120kW from the MGUH (powered entirely from the batteries (ES)) for a total of 590kW.
So which teams run a waste-gate? It doesn't make any sense to include one, since boost is controlled by the MGUH, collecting energy which would be lost by opening a waste-gate. It has been suggested that the waste-gate is there as a backup boost control - an intake blow-off valve would be smaller, simpler, cheaper and lighter. Is the waste-gate being used for a short-term power increase? A clue would lie in the size of the waste-gate valve. To use it in the way I have suggested, it would probably be larger than you would expect for boost-limiting alone.