nov.22.2008
ISTANBUL, Turkey -
The Olympic movement is on sound financial footing but must hold down the size and cost of the Games to cope with the global economic downturn, IOC president Jacques Rogge said Friday.
"The Games are not anymore in a growth mode, they are in a conservation mode," Rogge said in an address to the European Olympic Committees.
Rogge said future financial backing of the IOC by broadcasters and sponsors - who pump billions of dollars into the Olympics - will depend on successful staging of the Games.
"This is what I would call virtual money. If there are no good Games, there will be less money," he said. "We must make sure the Games do not become too sophisticated, too big and too costly.
Every demand to add more sports on the program, more athletes, more coaches or higher service levels adds to the difficulty of staging good Games."
Rogge said the IOC must maintain its cap of 28 sports and 10,500 athletes for the Summer Games, and resist an "underground swell" to increase the number to more than 30 sports.
"In an economic boom, if there are resources that can be committed, it is OK to grow and have bigger Games," he said later, speaking to reporters. "It is not a wise thing to do in a period of credit crunch."
The 2012 London Olympics will feature 26 sports. Seven sports - golf, softball, baseball, rugby, karate, squash and roller sports - are competing for two available slots on the program for the 2016 Games. The IOC will vote on the sports at its meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, next October.
Rogge insisted the financial situation for the next three Olympics - 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, London 2012 and 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia - was "secure."
"There is no issue of financing of these three Games," he said.
Rogge did not mention that London, with a 9.3-billion-pound (C$17.8-billion) budget, is struggling to secure private funding for the athletes' village and has moved some venues to save money. Sochi, with a US$12 billion budget, has to build virtually all the venues from scratch.
"Contrary to what you might read in some media, there is no danger for the financing of Sochi," Rogge said. "We have received very strong reassurances from the government that the funding is committed and is in place. Construction has started."
Rogge stressed that the IOC's own internal finances were solid.
"We have invested very conservatively," he said, adding that the IOC has distributed US$300 million in revenues to international sports federations and national Olympic committees over the last four-year cycle and will hand out US$311 million in the next four-year period.
Rogge said the IOC has secured about US$900 million in global sponsorship revenue for the 2009-12 cycle through deals with nine sponsors. The IOC had 12 sponsors for the 2005-08 period, raising US$866 million. Johnson & Johnson announced last week that it was not renewing its contract, following earlier departures by Kodak, Lenovo and Manulife.
Rogge said the IOC was negotiating for a possible 10th sponsor, but would settle for nine.
"If it materializes fine," he said. "If not, it's not a big issue."
The IOC has not yet concluded lucrative European and U.S. television deals for the 2014 and 2016 Olympics. It's uncertain if those deals will be completed before next October's vote on the 2016 host city. Chicago, Madrid, Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro are the candidates.
"We are not in a hurry," Rogge said. "We have a big cushion of time. Things will evolve in a quiet and diligent way."
The IOC leader said the financial crunch will hit hardest at the grass roots level of sports, with local clubs and national federations struggling to get sponsors and government financial funding.
"Today governments are bailing out banks with billions of dollars," Rogge said. "I do hope this will have no negative repercussions in their funding of sport. We make a call to governments not to forget sports in future budgets."