(Bloomberg) -- The 2020 Tokyo Olympics will be delayed by as much as a year in the first postponement since the modern games began in the 19th century, becoming the biggest global event to be disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he and International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach agreed to the unprecedented move in a telephone call Tuesday to delay the games that were set to begin in July. “The Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics will not be canceled,” Abe told reporters in Tokyo after the call, adding they will be held by the summer of 2021.
The coronavirus pandemic has made it all but impossible for aspiring Olympians to train and, in many cases, qualify for a July event. Abe said he received 100% support from Bach to delay the international sports event. They agreed to work closely to hold the games in complete form, symbolizing humanity’s victory over the coronavirus, he said.
“The unprecedented and unpredictable spread of the outbreak has seen the situation in the rest of the world deteriorating,” the Lausanne, Switzerland-based IOC said in a statement. The group said the Olympics needed to be rescheduled “to safeguard the health of the athletes, everybody involved in the Olympic Games and the international community.”
It was increasingly clear this week that the Tokyo Olympics were headed toward postponement as national teams made preparations to pull out if the games went forward as planned. Abe had acknowledged a delay might be unavoidable due to the coronavirus, which has caused more than 408,000 confirmed cases, led to a plunge in global markets and slammed the brakes on international travel.
The Olympic torch relay that was supposed to start later this week had already been called off. Despite the delay, the games will still be called the 2020 Olympics, according to Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike.
The shift to 2021 will cause logistical nightmares but will be far less painful than cancellation for the host, sponsors, broadcasters and others that have billions of dollars invested in the games.
A one-year delay would trigger about 641 billion yen ($5.8 billion) in economic losses, according to an estimate by Katsuhiro Miyamoto, an honorary professor at Japan’s Kansai University.
Japan has spent more than $26 billion to ready Tokyo for the games, according to some estimates. With about 600,000 foreign visitors and more than 11,000 athletes expected to attend, the Olympics were supposed to reinvigorate the economy, which shrank an annualized 7.1% from the previous quarter in the three months through December.
Abe told parliament Monday that the Olympics would have to be postponed if safety couldn’t be guaranteed for spectators and athletes due to the pandemic.
The Olympics have never been delayed a year or more by the IOC, which was established in 1894, though previous games have been canceled outright. The last time an Olympics was abandoned was in 1944, due to World War II. Earlier in the war, the 1940 games were initially postponed, but then canceled.
Postponing by a year was the popular option leading up to Tuesday’s decision. After Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the international travel ban currently in place would extend to the country’s Olympic delegation, the national team told its athletes to start training for 2021.
But a 2021 games has its own headaches, including a raft of sponsorship agreements set to expire in 2020 and a conflict with the global track-and-field championships. The scale of next year’s Olympics is yet to be decided, Toshiro Muto, Tokyo 2020’s chief executive officer, said in a separate briefing.
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