IOC Approves Solidarity Plan With Focus On Refugees

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has approved its new Olympic Solidarity Plan for the 2017-2020 quad, with a new focus on supporting refugee athletes.

The solidarity budget distributes the profits made from the IOC’s share of Olympic broadcast rights between the various National Olympic Committees across the country. The broadcast rights from the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics and 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics are set to bring in 16% more profit than the previous quad, according to a press release from the IOC. The total budget is about $509 million in American dollars.

The two new additions to this quad’s solidarity plan deal with refugee athletes and career transitions for retiring athletes. The 2016 Olympics were the first to feature a Refugee Olympic Team, for athletes displaced from their home nations. The new program is aimed at providing more support for refugee athletes through the National Olympic Committees in the countries where they live and train. The other new program provides financial backing to various Olympic committees to fund career programs and education in order to better help athletes prepare for life and career after their competition days are over.

 

The full IOC press release is below:

The Executive Board of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) today approved the Olympic Solidarity 2017-2020 Quadrennial Plan during a meeting in Lausanne.

The Olympic Solidarity development and assistance budget approved today amounts to USD 509,285,000 and corresponds to the share of the broadcast rights from the Olympic Games (Rio 2016 and PyeongChang 2018) which will be distributed to the National Olympic Committees (NOCs). This represents an increase of 16 per cent in comparison with the 2013-2016 Quadrennial Plan, whose budget amounted to USD 439,870,000.

“This increase shows that the athletes remain at the heart of all our activity.  The huge worldwide success of the Olympic Games Rio 2016 also means that the Olympic Movement continues to enjoy a sound financial situation. This enables us to distribute more than half a billion dollars over the next four years to the National Olympic Committees,“ said Pere Miró, Deputy Director General for Relations with the Olympic Movement and Director of Olympic Solidarity.

The aim of Olympic Solidarity is to organise assistance for all the NOCs, particularly those with the greatest needs, through a variety of world and continental programmes prioritising athlete development, training of coaches and sports administrators, and promoting the Olympic values.

Olympic Solidarity will propose 21 programmes to NOCs across the world with a high focus on athlete development and education. The 2017-2020 Quadrennial Plan proposes two new programmes:

  • Refugee Athlete Support: building on the experience of the Olympic Games Rio 2016, where a Refugee Olympic Team competed for the first time, it was decided to create a dedicated programme that would provide NOCs with the opportunity to identify and support a small number of refugee athletes living in their countries to prepare and participate in international competitions.
  • Athletes’ Career Transition: the aim of this programme is to offer NOCs assistance to support athletes at various stages of their career through financial and supportive measures with a view to enjoying a successful post-athletic career. NOCs will be offered financial support to fund various Athlete Career Programmes (ACPs) and encourage education for athletes.

“All of the Olympic Solidarity programmes have been designed to take into account the recommendations of Olympic Agenda 2020, the strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement and puts athletes at the heart of our activity,” indicated Pere Miró.

This is also demonstrated by the initiative that consists of building bridges between NOCs. NOCs will be encouraged to reach out to those with the greatest needs in order to see how they can provide them with assistance, either by offering training facilities to their athletes or by sharing working processes and experiences.

Olympic Solidarity programmes have been extremely successful over the past four years and have significantly helped NOCs to secure the participation of their athletes at the Olympic Games thus strengthening the concept of universal participation.

For example, 815 Olympic scholarship holders representing 171 NOCs and 22 sports participated in the Olympic Games Rio 2016. They won a total of 101 medals (33 gold, 26 silver and 42 bronze), as well as 163 Olympic diplomas. This included two NOCs winning their first ever Olympic medal and two NOCs winning their first ever Olympic gold medal.

Also in Rio, 20 teams were supported through the Team Support Grant programme and won eight medals (4 gold, 2 silver and 2 Bronze), as well as six Olympic diplomas.

Furthermore, Olympic Solidarity contributed significantly to the participation costs of all athletes and officials at the Olympic Winter Games Sochi 2014 and the Olympic Games  Rio 2016.

Over the past four years coaches from 172 NOCs benefited from 988 technical courses run by experts appointed by the International Federations, and 641 coaches received individual scholarships allowing them an opportunity to further their coaching skills and education.

NOCs organised 429 courses for sports administrators in their countries and 230 NOC officials and managers received a scholarship to pursue a masters in sports management.

Through the five Olympic Values programmes, Olympic Solidarity reached 94 per cent of the NOCs by funding 715 Olympic Values projects. Olympic Day celebrations were subsidised for around 135 NOCs each year.rio2016.com

0
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »