Paris mayor troubled by new Olympic sponsor Airbnb, vows referendum on home-sharing firm
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The IOC signed up Airbnb as an Olympic sponsor sparking concerns from 2024 host city Paris that the home-sharing company is contributing to the rising cost of rents in the French capital.
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who has been at odds with Airbnb in recent years, set out her issues with the platform to IOC President Thomas Bach last week after news of the sponsorship leaked.
Hidalgo wrote to Bach to “alert him of the risks and consequences” of the International Olympic Committee deal, Paris city hall told The Associated Press.
At the Airbnb sponsorship announcement on Monday morning, Bach was asked about criticism of Airbnb, including pricing people out of cities.
“It is quite normal that such a disruptive business then needs to settle and needs regulation,” Bach said, before details of the Paris complaint were known. “This is happening in a dialogue with Airbnb and cities and countries.”
Paris took legal action against the platform this year in a bid to have the company fined €12.5 million for allowing owners to rent their properties without having them properly registered.
In her letter, Hidalgo expressed her “absolute determination to make sure regulations relating to rental platforms are reinforced".
We’re excited to be partnering with the IOC and our Airbnb hosts for the next 5 Olympic and Paralympic Games, providing travel experiences that benefit the global sporting community as well as local communities. Together, we can host the world. #Olympics https://t.co/vP57W44LHY pic.twitter.com/aAGOxIldJI
— Airbnb (@Airbnb) November 18, 2019
Jean-François Martins, the deputy mayor for sports and tourism, told the AP that Hidalgo is planning to hold a referendum on Airbnb’s presence in Paris if she wins re-election next year.
“She believes that Airbnb has a nefarious impact on housing,” he said. “Parisians will have the choice between several options, including the possibility to have it banned in certain areas.”
In 2012, Airbnb had 4,000 Paris-area listings. That surged to more than 40,000 by 2015, when Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky was welcomed at city hall. Last year, Paris city hall said there were about 60,000 Airbnb listings in Paris.
In a study published last month by Euromonitor International, the market research provider noted that “short-term rentals have benefited from the consumer preference for authentic, local, off-the-beaten-track lodging options”.
“Hence the astronomical rise of Airbnb from a zero share 10 years ago, to four percent of global lodging, overtaking major hotel players,” it added.
The Airbnb-IOC partnership starts with the 2020 summer Olympics in Tokyo, runs through the Beijing winter Games two years later, the 2024 summer Olympics in Paris, the 2026 winter Games in Milan-Cortina and ends with the Los Angeles summer events in 2028.
“We’ll have teams on the ground to make sure that the listings are what they say they are,” Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia said. “And we have a guest guarantee to back that up.”
IOC President Thomas Bach and @Airbnb Co-founder Joe Gebbia @jgebbia #Olympics pic.twitter.com/WszYCdguMC
— IOC MEDIA (@iocmedia) November 18, 2019
The Olympic leadership, however, will not be swapping its luxury hotels for rental accommodation.
“(It) will be very difficult to organise executive board meetings and coordination meetings at the games every day if we would be in very different locations,” Bach said. “So we will find an accommodation which also meets our working requirements.
“This is not about being good enough, it’s about meeting the needs. Our spectator, a visitor, has different needs than us who have to run the games. We are there at the games not to watch like a tourist. We are there to organise the games.”
The IOC is pledging to make at least $28 million worth of Airbnb accommodation available to athletes at the Olympics and Paralympics.
“This partnership will greatly help us because it will provide accommodation that will reduce the cost for the Olympic Games organisers and all the stakeholders,” Bach said, without providing finances. “It will minimise the need for construction of new accommodation infrastructure for the Olympic Games period and it will generate direct revenue opportunities for the host communities.”
(FRANCE 24 with AP and AFP)
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