Published: 13:04, June 24, 2021 | Updated: 13:04, June 24, 2021
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2022 Olympics' benefits already seen
By Sun Xiaochen

This photo taken on June 23, 2021 shows the bilingual versions of the Legacy Report of Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games Beijing 2022 (pre-Games) at the headquarters of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games in Shougang Park, Beijing, China. (ZHANG CHENLIN / XINHUA)

With eight months until the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics open, benefits are already being seen in the promotion of winter sports and the development of venues and infrastructure, according to an organizing committee report.

Some Winter Olympic facilities have already opened, and infrastructure projects have resulted in improved sports and training venues, economic growth, urban development and construction of transportation networks.

All these measures will leave lasting legacies beyond the 2022 Games, which open on Feb 4, according to the Legacy Report of Beijing 2022 (pre-Games), released by the organizing committee on Wednesday. The release marked International Olympic Day, which falls on June 23 and commemorates the birth of the modern Olympic Games.

With a focus on the planning, creation and utilization of Winter Olympics' legacies in 35 aspects across seven areas, we are striving to leave valuable assets for the host and achieve a win-win situation between the Olympic movement and city development.

Han Zirong, a vice-president of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee

"The emphasis on long-term planning for post-Games operations has been our focus throughout the whole process from bidding for the Games to now," Han Zirong, a vice-president of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee, said at the launch of the report on Wednesday.

"With a focus on the planning, creation and utilization of Winter Olympics' legacies in 35 aspects across seven areas, we are striving to leave valuable assets for the host and achieve a win-win situation between the Olympic movement and city development," she added.

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A late starter in most winter sports, China is aiming to popularize such sports and promote outdoor activities among 300 million people in the buildup to the Games and beyond.

With the COVID-19 outbreak well under control in China, the country's winter sports governing body, local governments, resort operators and regional promoters organized over 1,200 winter sports competitions and carnival events last winter. About 100 million people participated, according to the National Winter Sports Administrative Center.

"The Olympic Games provide a unique opportunity and responsibility to create long-lasting benefits for their hosts through sustainable development," Juan Antonio Samaranch, an International Olympic Committee vice-president, said during a video speech at the launch.

"The Beijing 2022 legacy report shows tangible results in this respect already," said Samaranch, who also chairs the IOC coordination commission for Beijing 2022.

The 2022 Winter Olympics will be co-hosted by Beijing and Zhangjiakou, Hebei province, with about 2,800 athletes expected to take part.

READ MORE: Beijing 2022 preparations in full swing

With all 12 competition venues for the Games ready, organizers are busy developing measures to counter and control COVID-19, evaluating venue operations, training volunteers and finalizing post-Games plans.

As part of a national strategy to boost China's winter sports industry to a worth of 800 billion yuan (US$123.6 billion) by 2022, the country had built 654 ice rinks and 803 ski resorts by the beginning of this year, up 317 percent and 41 percent respectively from 2015, when Beijing won the right to host the Winter Games after the successful 2008 Summer Games.

The report also highlighted the renovation of four 2008 Summer Games venues in downtown Beijing, which will host ice sports in 2022, and the multifunction design of the new National Speed Skating Oval.

The Winter Games organizers' attention to clean and renewable energy, including solar and wind power at all the Olympic venues, was also noted in the report.

sunxiaochen@chinadaily.com.cn