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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Sports
Tokyo organizers unveil revised budget for Games
    2016-December-23  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    TOKYO Olympics organizers unveiled a smaller budget of up to US$17 billion Wednesday after coming under pressure to cut ballooning costs.

    The figure, down from last month’s pledge to cap expenditure at US$17.78 billion, follows warnings that the bill for the 2020 Games could soar as high as US$30 billion.

    Organizing committee chief executive Toshiro Muto said the entire Games budget will be between 1.6 trillion and 1.8 trillion yen, which he put at US$15-16.8 billion.

    Under the latest exchange rate, the same yen figure is worth US$13.6-15.3 billion. This year’s Rio Games cost US$12 billion, while London 2012 came in at 8.77 billion pounds or US$13.7 billion under the exchange rate at the time.

    Wednesday’s figure, the most complete budget yet for Tokyo 2020, comes after officials scrambled to slash the costs of building some Olympic venues.

    It was revealed at talks among the Games’ organizers, the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and Tokyo and national governments, who are meeting regularly to try to cut costs.

    “This does give the overall picture,” IOC Vice President John Coates said.

    Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, who was elected this year vowing to bring down costs, said some 40 billion yen would be saved after a review of the canoeing, volleyball and swimming venues.

    Koike said the organizing committee and Tokyo and central governments will discuss further specifics early next year, including “cost-sharing.”

    In the battle to cut costs, she had proposed moving the canoeing 400 kilometers north of Tokyo to Miyagi prefecture, one of the areas hardest hit by Japan’s 2011 tsunami disaster.

    But the idea faced resistance from the organizing committee, which argued that changing sites was impractical and could end up costing more. Koike gave up the plan last month and announced that canoeing will stay in Tokyo as planned.

    In the previous four-way meeting last month, Muto said the organizing committee’s working budget was capped at less than 2 trillion yen (US$17.78 billion) and officials are committed to pushing it lower. (SD-Agencies)

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