Latest News

Back to Latest News back

 

IOC’s Coates pledges that Tokyo Olympics will go ahead ‘with or without COVID’

IOC’s Coates pledges that Tokyo Olympics will go ahead ‘with or without COVID’
September 8, 2020

With next year's Tokyo Olympics identified as the most expensive Summer Games on record, International Olympic Committee (IOC) Vice-President, John Coates has said that the Games will go ahead in 2021 regardless of the status of the Coronavirus pandemic.

Speaking to Agence France-Presse, Coates said that the IOC was committed to staging “the Games that conquered COVID” and that the Olympics would go ahead “with or without COVID”.

Coates, who in mid-March downplayed the impact of the Coronavirus and maintained that they would open as planned on 24th July, advised overnight that the theme of the 2020 Games wil be “‘the Reconstruction Games’, after the devastation of the tsunami” which rocked Japan in 2011. 

He added “now very much these will be the light at the end of the tunnel."

The IOC Executive Committee Member and Australian Olympic Committee President was speaking following the first meeting of the three-party council – of the Japanese Government, the

Tokyo Metropolitan Government and the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee – that was set up to produce “robust countermeasures” to the pandemic to allow the Games to proceed as normally as possible during the next (Northern Hemisphere) summer. 

That will involve a “simplified” version of the Olympics, with Coates having previously stated that the IOC is still targeting having fans in attendance, though only where this can be achieved safely for both spectators, organisers and athletes. 

The next meeting of the task force will focus on that as well as issues of transportation and border control, with the Japanese government still unclear how the pandemic might affect athletes coming into the country to compete and whether they might be expected to quarantine on arrival. 

Coates went on to say "their job now is to look at all the different counter-measures that will be required for the Games to take place.

“Some countries will have it (Coronavirus) under control, some won’t. We’ll have athletes therefore coming from places where it’s under control and some where it is not. There’s 206 teams, so there’s a massive task being undertaken on the Japanese side.”

 

Coates’ comments follow those of IOC President Thomas Bach earlier this year, who said that the Games will either happen next year or not at all, with no further postponement beyond 2021 possible.

Study shows Tokyo Games will be the most expensive ever
A study from the University of Oxford has claimed that the Tokyo Olympics will be the most expensive Summer Games on record, with expenditure set to increase further due to the one-year postponement.

The study, by academic Bent Flyvbjerg, says the cost of the games is already US$15.84 billion and predicts several billion dollars more to be incurred due to the one-year suspension. The bill exceeds that for the 2012 London Olympics, the previous most expensive summer games at US$14.95 billion.

When Tokyo won the bid in 2013, organisers predicted the cost would be $7.3 billion.

The Associated Press reported that the International Olympic Committee said it had not seen the Oxford study and declined to comment beyond referring to another study by universities in Mainz and the Sorbonne which said the Tokyo costs were in line with other large-scale projects.

Flyvbjerg told the AP that the (IOC) "obviously don’t like our results, but it’s very difficult to counter a piece of rigorous research like this ... and they haven’t done that, and they can’t do that. Our research is a problem for them.”

Flyvbjerg added “The Olympics offer the highest level of risk a city can take on…The trend cannot continue. No city will want to do this because it’s just too expensive, putting themselves into a debt that most cities cannot afford.”

Flyvbjerg’s report, Regression to the Tail: Why the Olympics Blow Up, is due to be published on 15th September.

Images: Jon Coates (top) and t

About the author

Nigel Benton

Co-founder/Publisher, Australasian Leisure Management

Nigel Benton is the co-founder and Publisher of Australasian Leisure Management, Australia and New Zealand’s only magazine for professionals in all areas of the leisure industry. Having established the magazine in 1997, shortly after his relocation to Australia, he has managed its readership rising to over 11,500 and its acceptance as the industry journal for professionals in aquatics, attractions, entertainment, events, fitness, parks, recreation, sport, tourism and venues.

In 2020, he launched the new Asian Leisure Business website.

Among a range of published works and features, his comments on a Blog (blogspot) from 2007 to 2011, when this website went live in its current form, may be interesting to reflect back on.

Click here to connect with him via LinkedIn.

Read more from this author

Related Articles

25th August 2020 - Games broadcaster says chances of Tokyo Olympics being staged in 2021 are ‘50-50 at best’

24th August 2020 - Japanese athletes give Tokyo Olympic stadium a test run

27th July 2020 - Less than a quarter of Japan’s population support next year’s Tokyo Olympics

22nd July 2020 - Tokyo Olympics organisers confirm all venues for summer Games

15th July 2020 - Tokyo Governor says Olympics must go ahead in 2021

26th June 2020 - Tokyo Olympic organisers set to re-engage with sponsors

13th June 2020 - IOC Coordination Commission praises progress on Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics

8th June 2020 - National Olympic Committees to benefit from US$11.7 million of Tokyo 2020 funding to cover Coronavirus costs

7th June 2020 - Tokyo considering scaled down version for 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games

31st March 2020 - IOC confirms new dates for Tokyo Olympics

26th March 2020 - Tokyo Olympics organisers face ‘massive’ facilities costs for rescheduled Games

25th March 2020 - Olympic Council of Asia welcomes Tokyo Olympic Games postponement

25th March 2020 - Coronavirus fears sees Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics postponed to 2021

23rd March 2020 - IOC sets deadline for potential Tokyo Olympics postponement

17th March 2020 - IOC’s Coates refutes claims Olympic organisers are ‘underplaying the challenge’ posed by Coronavirus

16th March 2020 - Olympic organisers announce on time completion of all Tokyo 2020 venues

26th February 2020 - Top IOC member speculates Coronavirus threatens delivery of Tokyo Olympics

13th September 2019 - AOC’s Coates suggests Brisbane won’t need 80,000 seat stadium for Olympics hosting

24th October 2018 - AOC Chief Executive Matt Carroll calls for more money for Olympic and Paralympic sport

28th April 2018 - AOC President Coates takes aim at rivals in AGM address

25th August 2017 - No change at AOC while John Coates remains in post

6th May 2017 - John Coates wins vote to retain Australian Olympic Committee Presidency