Paris ramped up its bid for the 2024
Olympics on Tuesday, securing £6.2million in four sponsorship deals and
presenting its Eiffel Tower-shaped logo in a ceremony on the Champs Elysees.
The bid committee said each of the four
new sponsors - Caisse des Depots, Elior Group, JCDecaux and RATP - will
contribute about £1.5m to the budget.
The announcement followed the signing last month of the bid's
first sponsorship deal with France's national lottery, Francaise des Jeux,
which has also promised £1.5m in funding for the bid. 'We now look forward to
working with our partners to spread the special message of Olympism across our
city and nation so the public can really take part and engage with our campaign
to become the Olympic host city in 2024,' Paris bid chief executive Etienne
Thobois said.
Paris, which hosted the Olympics in
1900 and 1924, is competing against Budapest, Rome and LA for the games. The
International Olympic Committee will choose the host city in September 2017
![]() |
| some tourists taking selfies |
.Featuring colored stripes forming the
number 24, the Tour Eiffel bid logo was projected onto the Arc de Triomphe in a
ceremony held symbolically at 8:24 p.m. local time, or 2024.
The emblem was shown at the same time
on the facade of the town hall in Marseille, the Mediterranean port city which
would host the sailing competition and football matches if Paris gets the
games.
Paris leaders said the logo represents
the capital's 'dynamism, radiance and openness.'
'The logo is a modern interpretation of
Paris' most iconic symbol, the Eiffel Tower, that reflects the city's rich and
beautiful history whilst also conveying the positive sense of optimism, drive
and ambition of this vibrant metropolis,' they said in a statement.
The cost of the bid campaign has been
estimated at £46m, with half of the budget to be raised through private
funding. If Paris is awarded the Olympics, the infrastructure budget for
hosting the games is expected to reach £2.3b with operational costs of £2.5b.
Bid co-president Bernard Lapasset told
RTL radio that the public half of the funding has already been received through
subsidies from the state, the Paris region and the city itself. In tough
economic times, he also promised there will be no tax increases to finance the
project.
Lapasset said bid officials are
currently negotiating four more important sponsorship deals with companies he
did not name. A total of about 15 big corporations are expected to sponsor the
bid.
Despite the failure of a crowd funding
campaign that so far raised £490,000 instead of the £7.8m expected by the
French Olympic committee, Lapasset said he remains confident the Paris bid is
on the right track.
'It's going to start all over again,'
he said, insisting that a lack of communication hindered the funding plan. We
are about to submit our first dossier to the IOC. We are ready to present our
vision and the content of our bid to the IOC, and I'm convinced things will
change.'



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