France’s 2030 Winter Olympics bid and Salt Lake City’s 2034 proposal were picked as preferred hosts and will go into a dialogue with the International Olympic Committee, the IOC said yesterday.
Bid leaders will intensify talks with the IOC, fleshing out plans and state support, with the Olympic governing body to decide on the 2030 and 2034 hosts at its session in July, 2024.
“The IOC Executive Board today invited the French National Olympic Committee and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee into targeted dialogues towards hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games in the French Alps and the 2034 edition in Salt Lake City-Utah,” the IOC said in a statement.
“We will start more detailed discussions with the interested parties,” Karl Stoss, head of the IOC’s Future Host commission, told a press conference.
“They (cities) have now to do their homework. The decision is not made yet. The work is not finished. But we have another six months to come to a decision,” he said.
The French bid, which involves the Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes and Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur regions, scored points for its plan to hold the Games in four separate clusters as well as for its strong support from the public and private sector, the IOC said.
Salt Lake City
dropped plansSalt Lake City had initially wanted to bid for the 2030 Games but dropped plans due to it being too close to the 2028 summer Games in Los Angeles.
Its current plan relies on existing venues only and requires no significant capital investment, according to the IOC, while building on the work from the 2002 Games.This is not the first time in recent years that the IOC has sought long-term security with a double allocation, having picked Paris for the 2024 summer Games and LA for the 2028 edition back in 2017. France has also staged the Winter Games in 1924 in Chamonix, in 1968 in Grenoble and in 1992 Albertville.
Switzerland and Sweden had also expressed interest in hosting the 2030 Games. Salt Lake City staged the 2002 Winter Olympics.
Switzerland was invited into a “privileged dialogue” for the 2038 winter Games, with the bid working with the IOC until 2027 when a decision for a preferred host will be taken.
Meanwhile metro tickets will almost double in price during the Paris Olympics next year to help cover the cost of running urban transport with millions more visitors in the capital during the Games, the regional transport authority said this week.
Single tickets will be sold for four euros ($4.37), compared to €2.10 now, and 10-ticket blocks for €32, compared to 16.90 currently.
The head of the Paris region’s transport authority, Valerie Pecresse, said in a video posted late on Monday on X, formerly Twitter, that annual and monthly travel passes for residents would not be affected by the steep price rises.
“It is out of the question that people living in the Paris region should pay for the extra cost” brought on by the Olympic Games and estimated at €200mn, Pecresse said.
Some 10mn visitors are expected during the Olympic and Paralympic Games starting next July, requiring more frequent transport services.
Tourists will, however, be able to buy a special flat-rate pass for €16 per day or €70 per week during the Games for travel around Paris and its region, including to the Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports.
Pecresse advised Paris residents to stock up on metro tickets before July to avoid the surcharge.
She said the surcharge would be effective from July 20 to September 8.
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