Why
the Summer Olympics are held in July, August despite heat
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[July 26, 2018]
By Malcolm Foster
TOKYO (Reuters) - A heat wave scorching
Japan is raising questions about timing the Tokyo 2020 Olympics
during July and August, typically the annual peak for temperatures
and humidity, and the health risks that might pose for athletes and
spectators.
When Tokyo first hosted the Summer Olympics in 1964, they were held
during the cooler, drier month of October. The 1968 Mexico City
games were also held in October.
But most Summer Olympics for the past three decades have been held
in July or August, recognized as an ideal time window for TV
networks to cover the event.
They pay billions of dollars for broadcasting rights during these
months when the global sports calendar is otherwise light,
increasing the chances of capturing a bigger audience.
Neal Pilson, the former president of CBS Sports, which broadcast the
1992, 1994 and 1998 Winter Olympics in the United States, said "the
IOC is well aware of American network preferences for the timing of
the Summer and Winter games," referring to the International Olympic
Committee (IOC).
"The Summer Olympics are simply of less value if held in October
because of pre-existing program commitments for sports," he told
Reuters.
The IOC stipulated that bidders for the 2020 Olympics should hold
the event between July 15 and Aug 31. Tokyo chose July 24 to Aug 9.
To set the dates, the IOC gets input from international sporting
federations so as not to interrupt their schedules.
PRIME TIME
But the dates are also chosen because of the lull in the sports
calendar, public Olympic records show and TV sports marketing
experts say.
In September or October, the Olympics would have to compete for
viewers' attention against other events, such as the start of the
NFL American football season, Major League Baseball playoffs in the
United States and the early months of the soccer season in Europe.
"It's designed to fit in this window, a lull in the sports schedule
where not much is going on," said Victor Matheson, a professor of
economics at College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts.
Candidate cities can propose alternative dates, although they are
not always granted. When Doha in Qatar proposed hosting the 2020
games in October because it was too hot in July and August, the
Olympic Broadcasting Services, which provides TV coverage for many
events, and International Television and Marketing Services were
critical of the idea in feedback published in an April 2012 Olympic
working group report.
"Olympic Games held in the IOC's preferred period of July/August
provide broadcasters with a 'guarantee' that they will be prime-time
market leaders," the feedback read. "In October, broadcasters would
face lower viewership/ratings levels."
NBC, which in 2014 agreed to pay the IOC $7.65 billion for exclusive
broadcasting rights in the United States through 2032, declined to
comment.
Discovery Communications, which acquired Eurosport in 2015 and spent
1.3 billion euros to buy pan-European rights to four Olympics
through the Paris 2024 games, also declined to comment.
IOC spokesman Michael Noyelle said in an email that broadcasters
provide their input during the development of the competition
schedule after the Olympics dates have been set.
The IOC established July and August as the months to hold the Summer
Olympics in 2000, Noyelle said. "As there was no exception requested
for the Tokyo 2020 candidature, no stakeholders were consulted on
Tokyo's dates," he said.
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A woman holding a parasol stands in front of the construction site
of the New National Stadium, the main stadium of the Tokyo 2020
Olympics and Paralympic in Tokyo, Japan July 24, 2018. REUTERS/Kim
Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
"IDEAL CLIMATE"
Most Summer Olympics have been held in July and August since 1976,
and organizers have had to cope with hot weather in several host
cities.
Exceptions to the dates are made. The 2000 Sydney games were held in
the last two weeks of September to adjust to the Southern Hemisphere
weather.
Tokyo said in its bid that its proposed dates have "many days of
mild and sunny weather," providing "an ideal climate for athletes to
perform at their best."
The concerns about high temperatures during the Olympics have arisen
because of a heatwave in Japan this year.
Temperatures soared to a record 41.1 Celsius (106 F) on Monday just
north of Tokyo. At least 80 people have died and thousands have gone
to hospitals.
However, the average high for the last 10 days of July and first 10
days of August in Tokyo over the past 20 years has been about 32
Celsius (90 F), according to Japan Meteorological Agency data.
A team of international researchers that gathered heat, humidity and
other data along the proposed Tokyo marathon course in late July and
August in 2016 and 2017 found conditions could put athletes and
spectators at increased risk of heat stroke, and have urged
organizers to create more areas of shade.
"I'm afraid that Tokyo's conditions will be the worst in Olympic
history" for the marathon, said Makoto Yokohari, a professor of
environmental studies at the University of Tokyo who was involved in
the study and is an advisor to Olympics planners.
Tokyo organizers say they are taking the warnings seriously, and
have decided to move up the start time of the marathon races to 7
a.m. from 7:30 a.m. They are also covering the marathon course and
other major roads with more than 100 kilometers (60 miles) of a
resin-based surface that reflects infrared rays and lowers the
pavement temperature by as much as 8 degrees Celsius.
Organizers are also looking at ways to keep spectators cool with
tents, fans and sprays of cooling mist.
"We are preparing for the heat counter-measures in every possible
aspect," said Masa Takaya, a Tokyo 2020 spokesman.
Holding the games in October or November "would be an ideal time for
Tokyo, but I would say never in summer in Tokyo," said Yokohari, the
marathon study professor. "It's hot and very humid."
(Reporting and writing by Malcolm Foster; additional reporting by
Elaine Lies in Tokyo and Liana Baker in New York; Editing by Neil
Fullick)
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