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Our annual reports

Paris 2024 is an organisation evolving within a complex ecosystem alongside a large number of local, national and international stakeholders. The annual reports, published each year, provide an update on developments and assess the progress made, as well as the steps still to be taken through to 2024. You will be able to find the Paris 2024 project’s annual reports (from 2020 through to 2024) on this page as soon as they are published.

2022 Annual Report

Rich, intense, memorable, thrilling: 2022 was all of those things and more. With the unveiling of our slogan “Games Wide Open” and the Phryges—the Paris 2024 mascots—as well as the Olympic and Paralympic competition schedules and the route for the Mass Participation Marathon, the French and international public were able to gain an even clearer picture of this upcoming event. The excitement is building, as demonstrated by the fervour generated by the first-ever International Paralympic Day held at Place de la Bastille. In terms of organisation, 2022 marked a distinct acceleration in the project with the fixing of the operational planning and the gradual transition to the Games delivery phase. Now onto the home stretch.

2021 Annual Report

2021 was a key year for the Paris 2024 project. It was an Olympic and Paralympic year, with Paris 2024 becoming the next host city for the Summer Games following the Tokyo 2020 Games. It was also a decisive year from an operational perspective, as there were a number of challenges to navigate, including operating in the midst of a global pandemic. In March 2021, our climate strategy was adopted by the Executive Board, setting out our commitment to minimise our enviromental impact and offset more CO₂ emissions than those generated by the organisation of the Games. 2021 was also an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to renewing the Olympic experience by unveiling an Olympic first: an Opening Ceremony that will be held outside of a stadium, and instead take place in the heart of Paris.

2020 Annual Report

In 2020, while the world faced an unprecedented crisis, we needed to challenge ourselves and adapt (such adaptations included making changes to our competition venue map) while maintaining our ambition to organise a Games that are fit for a new era, more sustainable, spectacular, and open to all, thereby leaving a legacy for the various communities and their residents. In an exceptional health context, in which exercise became an important feature of our lives, we have continued, with even more determination, to move forward with our mission to promote the role of sport by proposing to establish 30 minutes of daily exercise in primary schools.