The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

IOC says postponing Tokyo Olympics will cost it $800M

- By Graham Dunbar

The IOC set aside $800 million on Thursday for loans and payments arising from the pandemic that forced the 2020 Tokyo Olympics to be postponed.

It is still unclear how big the total postponeme­nt bill will be with Olympic organizers and public authoritie­s in Japan facing extra costs estimated to run into billions of dollars.

“We anticipate that we will have to bear costs of up to $800 million for our part of the responsibi­lities for the organizati­on of the games,” Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach said.

A sum of $150 million will be available to make loans to sports governing bodies and more than 200 eligible national

Olympic committees. They have cash flow issues while unable to organize events and were due to get payments this year for the Tokyo Games, which are now scheduled to open in July 2021.

The loan program is being run with Switzerlan­d’s federal government, which announced aid Wednesday for Olympic sports federation­s based in the country. The IOC will put up half the money for those loans, and federal and state authoritie­s provide 25% each.

A detailed breakdown of how the remaining $650 million could be allocated will be formulated in the months ahead, IOC chief operating officer Lana Haddad said.

“It is a little too early to pull together all known and unknown costs.” Haddad told reporters on a conference call af

ter an IOC board meeting held remotely.

The IOC had revenue of $5.7 billion from the 201316 Olympic cycle. That figure would likely have approached $7 billion for the next four-year period tied to the Tokyo Games.

Before the postponeme­nt, Japanese organizers officially said the bill for the games would be $12.6 billion. However, a government audit in 2019 said it was at least twice that, and most in taxpayer money.

Bach said all of the IOC’s 14 top-tier sponsors — whose deals are worth more than $1 billion combined in the 2017-20 period — are committed to fulfilling their support through 2021.

In its most recent accounts, for 2018, there was $897 million in the Olympic Foundation portfolio intended to “cover the IOC’s operating cash requiremen­ts in the event of a cancellati­on of any future Olympic Games.”

Some public health experts have suggested the Tokyo Olympics could have to be canceled if vaccines for the COVID-19 are not available globally.

“It is way too early to draw any conclusion­s now,” Bach said Thursday when asked how important vaccines were to the Summer Games in 14 months’ time.

Six months after the

Tokyo Olympics are due to close, the 2022 Winter Games are scheduled to open in China where the coronaviru­s outbreak started.

Bach said preparatio­ns for the Beijing Olympics “continue to go very well” and the back-to-back timing could be a benefit.

“This will keep and even raise awareness of the world for the Olympic Games at a very high level,” he suggested.

 ?? KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this March 25, 2020, file photo, a man walks in front of a Tokyo Olympics logo at the Tokyo metropolit­an government headquarte­rs building in Tokyo.
KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this March 25, 2020, file photo, a man walks in front of a Tokyo Olympics logo at the Tokyo metropolit­an government headquarte­rs building in Tokyo.

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