Postponing Olympics to cost IOC ‘several hundred million dollars’, says Bach

Thomas Bach said the postponement of the Tokyo Olympic Games due to coronavirus will cost the IOC “several hundred million dollars”.

Published : Apr 29, 2020 17:50 IST , Lausanne

Thomas Bach hinted that while the IOC would honour its financial obligations to the Tokyo Olympics, it would probably have to make cuts.
Thomas Bach hinted that while the IOC would honour its financial obligations to the Tokyo Olympics, it would probably have to make cuts.
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Thomas Bach hinted that while the IOC would honour its financial obligations to the Tokyo Olympics, it would probably have to make cuts.

The postponement of the Tokyo Olympic Games to 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic will cost the International Olympic Committee (IOC) “several hundred million dollars”, its president Thomas Bach said on Wednesday.

“We already know that we have to shoulder several hundred million US dollars of postponement costs,” the German wrote in a letter to the Olympic movement, warning that, while the IOC would honour its financial obligations to Tokyo, it would probably have to make cuts.

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“We also need to look into and review all the services that we provide for these postponed Games,” he said.

“The IOC will continue to be responsible for its share of the operational burden and its share of the costs for these postponed Games,” he added.

The IOC, which has approximately $1 billion in reserves, took the historic decision to postpone the Games, scheduled to open on July 24, until July 23 to August 8, 2021.

If the coronavirus pandemic is not brought under control within a year, the Games cannot be postponed again and will be cancelled, the head of the organising committee (COJO) Yoshiro Mori warned on Tuesday.

A task force, which brings together the IOC and various partners, including COJO, “has established the priorities and management strategies to make these postponed Olympic Games feasible and successful,” Bach said.

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These include creating “a safe environment with regard to health for all participants.”

“At this moment, nobody knows what the realities of the post-coronavirus world will look like,” he said. “What is clear, however, is that probably none of us will be able to sustain every single initiative or event that we were planning before this crisis hit.” He added that the IOC should also view the crisis as an opportunity.

“We can fairly assume that, in the post-coronavirus society, public health will play a much more important role. Sport and physical activity make a great contribution to health,” he wrote.

Bach also said the Olympic movement should consider its relationship with e-sports in light of social distancing.

“Whilst maintaining our principles by respecting the red line, with regard to the Olympic values, we encourage all our stakeholders even more urgently to ‘consider how to govern electronic and virtual forms of their sport and explore opportunities with game publishers’,” he said.

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