The International Olympic Committee warned
organizers of the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro five years ago that construction
contracts they drew up could give developers incentives to cut corners,
presaging problems with athletes' housing that drew complaints from several
countries this week, documents showed.
Rio's city government, responsible for the
vast majority of infrastructure projects for the Games, has used public-private
partnerships, or PPPs, to get private firms to cover the cost of building
venues in return for permission to build real estate on the sites.
Rio's mayor, Eduardo Paes, has taken pride in
the fact that 57 percent of the nearly 40 billion reais ($12.3 billion) spent
on the Olympics is private money, garnered by using PPPs on a scale never
before seen at a Games.
Yet criticism over the quality of the work at
the privately funded Olympic Village erupted this week with Australia saying
housing was "not safe or ready" and other countries such as Italy,
Argentina and New Zealand also expressing concerns.
In documents seen by Reuters, the IOC told
the city in 2011 it needed to carefully monitor its partners because they might
pay more attention to their own commercial interests than delivering Olympic
projects on time and to high standards.
"The city recognizes that the PPP
contractor most likely has two primary objectives, maximize land value and
deliver venue obligations at least cost," the IOC said in one of the
documents assessing infrastructure plans for the Games, seen by Reuters using a
freedom of information request.
"The city must be diligent in making
sure the Games obligations are fully met," the IOC said.
Neither Rio's city government nor the IOC
responded to requests for comment.
The IOC document reviewed by Reuters did not
go into details about how problems might arise with the contracts, which marked
a departure from previous Games dominated by public spending.
London's 2012 Olympics was over 80 percent
publicly funded and the Olympic Village was paid for using taxpayer money, with
the government taking on the risk of having to sell the apartments after the
Games.
By contrast, the 31 tower blocks of the
Olympic Village in Rio, built at a cost of $880 million to house 18,000
athletes and team staff during the 17-day event, will be sold off as luxury
housing after the Games.
The
IOC has publicly welcomed PPPs as a way of reducing the cost of the Games for
host nations but three sources involved in Rio's preparations told Reuters
there were widespread concerns over the quality of work being delivered.
They said the local organizing committee, Rio
2016, had been constrained in its ability to ensure projects met IOC standards
because it was operating under huge financial strain.
This month, Reuters reported that despite
deep cost cuts, Rio 2016 was running a deficit of $120 million to $150 million.
Low ticket sales, a slump in the Brazilian
currency and lukewarm appetite from sponsors have all taken their toll on the
privately funded organization that runs the Games before handing infrastructure
back to the city.
Organizers deployed more than 600 workmen to
tackle last-minute problems with water and electricity at the Olympic Village
and said emergency work on all 31 accommodation blocks should be completed this
week.
Rio 2016, the local organizing committee,
said the accommodation was delivered in May but electricity and water were not
tested properly.
"Theoretically, the builder should have delivered everything
ready but we all know what it's like with building work; there is always
something to be fixed," spokesman Mario Andrada told reporters on
Monday.
Ilha Pura, the joint venture between
construction companies Carvalho Hosken and Odebrecht that built and own the
village, said the project was delivered complete and to agreed standards.
"Ilha Pura has completely supported Rio2016 in carrying out
tests and maintenance work, deploying specialised technicians and work teams -
they are working long hours for the solution of problems as quickly as
possible," it said in an emailed statement.
Developers say they have sold just 240 of the
3,600 Olympic Village apartments that go for between 750,000 and 3 million
reais ($230,000 to $925,000), as Brazil's worst recession since the 1930s has
dented demand.
Rio house prices are down 20 percent in real
terms over the past year.
The development comes complete with a
landscaped central park, fountains, tennis courts and swimming pools. Critics
said the city missed a chance to build affordable housing like London did.
Just across the lagoon from Ilha Pura, finishing
touches were being made to the Olympic Park, which has nine venues and will
hold 16 Olympic sports.
Culled from Reuters
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