Cost of London Games comes in €463m under budget

OLYMPICS 2012: THE COST of the London 2012 Games has come in at £377 million (€463 million) under budget, according to British…

OLYMPICS 2012:THE COST of the London 2012 Games has come in at £377 million (€463 million) under budget, according to British government figures released yesterday.

The overall cost of the Games is forecast at £8.921 billion (€10.954 billion) from a budget of £9.298 billion (€11.381 billion).

With some contracts still to be wound up after the end of the Games, ministers are describing the underspend as a “prudent” estimate. British sports minister Hugh Robertson described the feat of managing the complex programme within budget as “a tremendous success”.

He said: “The work of the construction and delivery teams, from the ODA (Olympic Delivery Authority) and Locog (London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games), has set a very high standard and I have no doubt that London 2012 has set a new benchmark for the management of Olympic and Paralympic Games in future.”

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Talks are also still ongoing between the London 2012 organisers and G4S to get the security firm to pay back money for the fiasco over its failure to provide enough security guards for the Games.

Robertson said: “There are projected savings of at least £377 million so the predictions that I made this summer that we could bring this project in at under £9 billion (€11.01 billion) has almost certainly been met.

“The £377 million figure is conservative because there are lumps of contingency that are still attached to the outstanding work.

“Locog (the London 2012 organisers) also have to conclude, and we have to sign off, the negotiations with G4S over the size of the amount of money that will be paid back to the public purse – so if you were to add to that £377 million, anything that will not be used but is held against outstanding work and anything that might come back from G4S, it is entirely reasonable to expect that figure to rise.”

Some £103 million (€126.5 million) of contingency is being held to cover the remaining risks in the programme. These include the retrofit of the Olympic Village to get it ready for use when it reopens after the Games.

There are also around 2,000 contracts with the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA), the Olympic builders and London 2012 which still have to be closed out. In addition, £480 million (€589 million) of uncommitted contingency still remains within the budget.

The ODA’s construction and transport programme has come in at £6.714 billion (€8.244 billion), according to the estimates. This is a drop of £47 million (€57.7 million) on the previous estimated figure. The savings made by the ODA are now at £1.032 billion (€1.267 billion).

Overall savings have been made through “really tough project management”, according to Robertson.