London 2012 plugs in Aggreko
London 2012 plugs in Aggreko as official provider and tier 3
sponsor.
The London Organising Committee of the Olympic
Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) has appointed Aggreko plc to be
the exclusive supplier of temporary energy services for London 2012
and in the process becomes a tier three sponsor of London 2012.
Under the agreement, Aggreko will provide
power across 39 venues in 7 different locations – London, Cardiff,
Coventry, Cardiff, Glasgow, Manchester, Newcastle and Weymouth. The
power will be provided by generators located at each venue
distributed through over 1,000 kilometres of cable and 3,500
distribution panels. Aggreko plans to deploy a team of over 150
people for the contract, and most of the equipment used in the
project will be manufactured at Aggreko’s factory in Scotland.
In addition to supporting both the Opening and
Closing Ceremonies at the Olympic Stadium in London, Aggreko
equipment will also be used to power field-of-play lighting and
camera equipment in the various stadia as well as powering the
International Broadcasting Centre, which will be providing
television feeds to billions of people around the world.
Rupert Soames, Chief Executive of Aggreko,
welcomed the deal saying: ‘We normally play away from home in
places such as Beijing (2008 Olympics), Vancouver (2010 Winter
Olympics) and South Africa (2010 FIFA World Cup). It is
therefore enormously exciting to have the opportunity to perform in
front of our home crowd. We look forward to supporting the
Organising Committee in their task of providing faultless execution
of the London Olympic Games and Paralympic games, and uninterrupted
broadcasting to hundreds of millions of viewers world-wide.’
LOCOG Commercial Director Chris Townsend
added, ‘We are delighted to welcome Aggreko to the London 2012
family. They will help to ensure our venues are fully
operational and powered becoming a vital cog in our
organisation. They are coming on board as we head towards a
crucial year for London 2012 – next year sees us move to becoming a
fully operational organising committee, testing our venues and
testing our systems.’