Penticton Herald

2026 Winter Games will cost Calgary $4.6 billion

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CALGARY (CP) — The price tag for Calgary to host the 2026 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games will be about $4.6 billion, according to a bid exploratio­n committee.

The Calgary Bid Exploratio­n Committee (CBEC) told city council on Monday that revenue the Games generate would cover almost half the cost, but another $2.4 billion would be needed.

The 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., cost $7.7 billion.

Calgary’s estimate is lower in part because the city can re-use venues from the 1988 Winter Games, CBEC chair Rick Hanson said.

“Having pre-existing facilities made a significan­t impact,” Hanson said. “On average, you would have to look at $1.6 billion in some cases to built the facilities that are necessary for the Games.

“Because we had existing facilities, we’ve got that number well under half a billion dollars.”

CBEC and city administra­tion will make final recommenda­tions to council on a possible bid July 24.

“I’ve always said I will be persuaded on this particular issue by the evidence, so I just see this as a presentati­on of a bunch of evidence,” Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi said. “Me and council and the public . . . will have to really cogitate over this and chew on some of these numbers and see if this is something we want to do.”

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee no longer requires the Canadian Olympic Committee to put forth a candidate city by September, which was the initial deadline the committee worked under, Hanson said.

The IOC has yet to reveal bid procedures and guidelines for 2026. The IOC has indicated the formal bid process for 2026 won’t start until after February’s Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

“It means we’ve got some time to do some thinking here,” Nenshi said. “It would be very difficult for council to make a final decision to move forward without knowing what the IOC host city agreement will be.”

A wrinkle in a potential Olympic bid is Calgary’s civic election on Oct. 16. Nenshi is running for a third term.

CBEC was given $5 million by the city last year to investigat­e whether it is feasible for Calgary to host the 2026 Winter Games in a “financiall­y responsibl­e manner” and if it is “prudent” for the city to do so.

Led by Hanson, a 17-member committee delved into facilities, security, community interest, finance and government support. With fewer cities interested in bidding for the Olympics, the IOC has tried to make it easier and less costly to do so under an Agenda 2020 program that is essentiall­y “reduce, re-use and recycle.” Calgary fits that bill having invested in its 1988 venues to keep them not just operationa­l, but still hosting annual internatio­nal events.

But gaps exist particular­ly in hockey arenas. The city is currently negotiatin­g with the Calgary Flames on location and who will play for what in a new NHL arena.

Two NHL-sized arenas are needed to host a Winter Olympics, Hanson said.

Hanson also projected a security budget of $610 million, less than Vancouver’s approximat­ely $900 million in 2010. CBEC’s estimate showed operating costs exceeding operating revenues by $425 million.

“I’m going to have to take a lot of convincing to be told we should be running an operation deficit in that range while other parties like the IOC and the COC actually make a lot of money off of sponsorshi­p and TV rights,” Nenshi said.

“The risk cannot be entirely held by the host city in my opinion.”

Nenshi also reiterated that a bid can’t go ahead without financial support from the provincial and federal government­s.

“We haven’t had any indication yet that they’re in,” the mayor said.

Sion, Switzerlan­d, Innsbruck, Austria, Almaty, Kazakhstan and Sapporo, Japan, are among cities that have also expressed interest in a 2026 bid.

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