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London Olympics budget issues to be resolved in 2007

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-12-28 08:54

Budget issues concerning the London 2012 Olympics will be figureed out early in 2007, organizers said Wednesday.

The British government is expected to pass its first Olympic budget under close scrutiny after the resignation of key engineer Jack Lemley from the Olympic Delivery Authority in mid-October.

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"Rigorous cost management is a fundamental pillar of this project and we are working with government to ensure issues of budgets and funding are resolved early in the New Year and we are confident they will be," London 2012 Olympics chairman Sebastian Coe and ODA chairman Roy McNulty said in a joint New Year message.

Lemley said he resigned as chairman of the ODA, the body responsible for building the venues and infrastructure for the games, because of political infighting and construction projects appearing likely to come in late and cost more than expected.

Lemley claimed Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell knew of the potential 1 billion pounds (1.48 billion euro) additional tax bill that could affect the games, months before she confirmed it in an address to a parliamentary committee on Nov. 21.

The final budget hasn't been formulated yet, but some British lawmakers have speculated the total cost could reach more than 8 billion pounds (11.8 billion euro).

Coe and McNulty said 2006 had been a year of great progress and left the organizations in great shape for next year.

Organizers will begin to clear the 202-hectare (500-acre) Olympic Park site in Stratford, East London, install utilities and develop more detailed venue plans.

The first demolition work began this month and work on putting powerlines underground began in April.