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Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
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FILE PHOTO: A woman is silhouetted against a monitor showing Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics emblems during the Olympic and Paralympic flag-raising ceremony at Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building in Tokyo, Japan, September 21, 2016. REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File Photo

Tokyo Olympics 2020 organisers ask public to donate old phones to make medals

They want people to deposit unwanted electronic devices at recycling bins in order to help collect eight tonnes of gold, silver and bronze

Tokyo Olympic organisers have called on the Japanese public to donate old smartphones and other old electronic devices to help make medals for the 2020 Games.

In a push to give the Olympics an environmentally friendly hue, Tokyo’s organising committee is aiming to collect eight tonnes of gold, silver and bronze at recycling bins across Japan from April, officials said, to make 5,000 Olympic and Paralympic medals.

Tokyo 2020 said e-waste such as digital cameras, laptops and games units can also be donated at collection boxes in more than 2,000 stores of mobile phone giant and Olympic sponsor NTT Docomo.

Recycled metals have been used in previous years to make Olympic medals, including in Rio last year where the silver and bronze medals were 30 per cent made from recycled materials.

Tokyo’s Big Sight will be used as a venue for the 2020 Olympics. Photo: Reuters

“An Olympic medal is one of the most coveted items in existence,” American two-time Olympic decathlete champion Ashton Eaton said.

“People spend decades, often agonising ones, working to obtain one,” he added.

Organisers insisted they would look to keep costs as low as possible with Tokyo’s preparations for the Games plagued by concerns over soaring prices.

Experts had warned the total Games budget could hit an eye-watering $30 billion (HK$232.7 billion) – four times the initial estimate and almost triple that of the 2012 London Olympics.

Yuriko Koike briefs reporters on a draft for the fiscal 2017 budget for the metropolitan government. The draft budget included 48.3 billion yen ($425 million) for preparations for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics, 13.8 billion yen less than the previous year. Photo: Kyodo

In response, organisers unveiled a streamlined budget of just under $17 billion (HK$131.9 billion) in December.

Officials will be hoping for smoother progress in the run-up to 2020 after a series of embarrassing gaffes since beating Madrid and Istanbul in the race to host the Olympics.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe scrapped plans for the main stadium in July 2015 over its $2 billion (HK$155.1 billion) price tag.

Claims of plagiarism then forced them to ditch the Olympic logo, before French prosecutors launched an investigation into how Tokyo won its bid. Japanese Olympic officials deny any wrongdoing.

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