Malta Independent

Bach and IOC: No Olympic city ever as ready as Tokyo

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IOC President Thomas Bach and other Internatio­nal Olympic Committee members are calling Tokyo the best prepared host city in memory.

Still, there are obstacles ahead for the 2020 Games, though small by the standards of the corruption-plagued Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016.

John Coates, the head of an IOC inspection team, wrapped up three days of meetings in Tokyo on Wednesday and said the city's summer heat is a growing worry.

Organizers are proposing to start the marathon between 5:306 a.m., and have moved up morning rugby matches by 90 minutes to play in the cooler air. Mountain biking will be contested later in the afternoon for the same reason.

Organizers are also struggling to keep the 600 billion yen (about $5.3 billion) operating budget balanced with heat-related solutions driving up costs.

This is the privately-funded budget for running the games themselves and separate from billions more that government­s are spending to prepare the city.

"The organizing committee and the people of Japan remain on track to deliver spectacula­r Olympic and Paralympic Games," Coates said.

Yoshiro Mori, the president of organizing committee, was sitting alongside and was cautious about the plaudits.

"We should not be overconfid­ent about such praise," he said through an interprete­r.

"We still should buckle down very firmly ... They praise us, they give us a good report card. But in addition to that I want to be better."

This summer's scorching Tokyo heat nudged 40 degrees C (104 degrees F) several times and is running up costs and concerns.

Coates said an IOC panel had studied the problem and called this summer "abnormal." money, public money is still the backbone of the Tokyo Olympics.

The national government's Board of Audit spelled out total Olympic costs in a 178-page report published in October. It forecasts total spending to prepare the Olympics at about $20 billion. That includes the private operating budget.

The rest comes from the national government, Tokyo city government and other local government­s — meaning about 75 percent of the funding is taxpayer money.

This reality contrasts sharply with Tokyo's winning bid in 2013, which projected overall Olympics costs of 829 billion yen ($7.3 billion).

Tokyo organizers and the IOC dispute what are — and what are not — Olympic costs. It's complicate­d. Some projects might have been built without the Olympics and are not clearly related. Others are driven directly by the requiremen­ts of hosting the games.

Stung by criticism of forcing cities to build white elephant venues, the IOC is saying the upcoming Olympics in Paris (2024) and Los Angeles (2028) will rely heavily on existing venues.

The same is true for the two bids for the 2026 Winter Olympics: Stockholm, Sweden, and the Italian bid of MilanCorti­na.

The outlier is the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. The Chinese capital spent at least $40 billion on the 2008 Summer Olympics. Bach and the IOC have cautioned China to keep the costs down.

Also, the Tokyo city government said a 51-year-old man died Wednesday after falling from the 12th floor of a building under constructi­on at the athletes village in the bay area of Tokyo.

He was Japanese, but his name has not been released.

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