Euro 2012 - Ukraine and Poland

November 30, 2007

Poland picks designer for Euro 2012 stadium

Filed under: Poland, Stadiums — Ivan @ 4:11 am

Poland has chosen a German-Polish consortium to design its new national stadium, which will host the opening match of the 2012 European Championship.Sports Minister Miroslaw Drzewiecki said Thursday that JSK Architects will design the new arena in Warsaw because of its experience in “more than 20 stadium projects” worldwide.

The stadium is to seat 55,000, and is scheduled to open in 2011.

Poland is co-hosting Euro 2012 with neighboring Ukraine and both countries face the challenge of building stadiums and upgrading dilapidated infrastructure.

Drzewiecki said he expected the stadium design to be ready in six months, and the ministry estimates the cost of the entire project to be 1 billion zlotys (US$408 million; €273 million).

A contractor still has to be selected to build the stadium, which will be located on the eastern bank of the Vistula River in the Polish capital.

The Euro 2012 final will be held at Kiev’s redeveloped Olympic Stadium.

source:iht.com

November 29, 2007

Poland convicts may build sports stadiums

Filed under: Poland, Stadiums — Ivan @ 4:33 am

WARSAW, Poland, Nov. 28 (UPI) — A Polish government minister has come up with a plan to employ convicts to build stadiums for the European soccer championships in 2012.

Polish Justice Minister Zbigniew Cwiakalski said employing convicts would temporarily solve the issue of Polish overcrowded prisons and would provide cheap labor force needed to build six stadiums for the Euro 2012 soccer championships, Polish Radio reported Wednesday.

There are some 58,000 convicted people waiting for a free place in jails to begin serving their time, the radio said.

The idea seems attractive as Poland is also suffering of a shortage of construction workers, who in thousands have left in search for better-paying jobs in Western Europe since the country joined the European Union in 2004.

Cwiakalski ruled out sending murderers or pedophilia-related convicts to building sites, adding he had in mind only those convicted for minor crimes. 

Source:upi.com

November 27, 2007

UKRAINE - World ranking 29

Filed under: World Soccer — Ivan @ 4:56 am

Striker Andriy Shevchenko is their main threat but, judging by his form at Chelsea, he looks like a player on the wane.

But his reputation earns him the right to be seen as a threat, while fellow forward Andriy Voronin is showing the potential to be a thorn in England’s side as he tries to make his mark at Liverpool.

Holding midfielder Anatoliy Tymoschuk starts Ukraine’s attacks and has reportedly been eyed by both Arsenal and Manchester United.

Ukraine will host Euro 2012 and will be making attempts to improve and bring on their national side so England will have to be wary.

They finished fourth behind Italy, France and Scotland as they failed to qualify for Euro 2008 but lost only one game at their Kiev home - to Italy - in the process.

November 23, 2007

UEFA experts go to L’viv ahead of Euro 2012

Filed under: Ukraine — Ivan @ 2:33 am

A delegation of experts from UEFA have gone to L’viv to meet with representatives of the Ukraine Football Federation, in preparation for the joint Poland-Ukraine Euro 2012 championships.

Five different groups are to meet with the experts, including the mayor of L’viv. Other groups included representatives of local transport, the L’viv airport and hotels and health spokespersons.

The experts are to visit hotels, the local airport and hospitals during their stay, before moving to the capital Kiev. Two more cities in the Ukraine, Doneck and Dniepopietrovsk, will be hosting matches as part of the Euro 2012 championships. Reserve cities include Odessa and Charkiv.

Source:polskieradio.pl

November 22, 2007

Fitch: Euro 2012 set to cost €27bn

Filed under: Money, Poland — Ivan @ 12:40 am

The rating agency Fitch estimates that hosting the Euro 2012 football championships will set Poland back €27bn. The agency’s calculations take into account both the construction of new stadiums for matches as well as investments in transport infrastructure.

Representatives of the previous government argue that the agency’s estimates are too high, even though no official cost estimate for the tournament is in place. According to the government, such an estimate should be ready by the end of 2007. Fitch reckons that the biggest challenge facing the organisers is bringing old and incomplete road infrastructure up to scratch. In the agency’s opinion, the country’s transport infrastructure needs may require total expenditure of as much as €100bn. Civic Platform (PO) MPs, who have formed Poland’s new governing coalition with the Polish Peasants’ Party (PSL), regard the agency’s figures as reliable estimates.

The new government is pondering possible changes to the existing law aimed at streamlining the road construction process, since the country’s special Euro 2012 statute does not take such investments into account. PO wants to simplify and shorten administrative procedures, including those dealing with the expropriation and purchasing of land.

November 15, 2007

WB: new gov’t must pass reforms

Filed under: Ukraine — Ivan @ 3:40 am

by Maria Petrova, KyivPost

The World Bank last month issued a list of recommended policies for Ukraine’s new, yet still unformed, government to follow.

The bank, a major lender to Ukraine and other developing countries, urged Ukraine to concentrate on speedily concluding a free trade agreement with the European Union, which would attract international investment in the lead-up to the Euro 2012 Soccer Championship, and to take advantage of its emerging market status by attracting fresh investment capital, improving corporate governance and strengthening regulation.

The bank called upon Ukraine’s leaders to reduce the tax burden, restart pension reforms, move forward in energy and utility price system reforms, establish a transparent land market, and carry out judicial and administrative reforms.

“What we have tried to do is suggest to a new [Ukrainian] government an implicit sequence [of policy recommendations],” World Bank Economic Adviser Martin Raiser said.

Raiser said Ukraine’s new government will be able to boast positive results if in six months it could say that it was an active government, which pushed through a procurement law, a new joint stock company law, improved the investment climate and achieved macroeconomic improvement, satisfying the social aspirations of the people and providing sufficient room for the future investment financing that the country needs.

“All of our recommendations, we believe, are well-founded, though they are not revolutionary at all. But I think, for Ukraine and for a new government it would be great if in six months they could face the public and say: ‘Well, look! You know, this government was an active government,” Raiser said.

Source:kyivpost.com

November 14, 2007

Two new football fields with artificial turf to be opened in Kyiv

Filed under: Stadiums, Ukraine — Ivan @ 1:47 am

As the Kyiv City State Administration’s (KCSA) press-service reported, the city’s authorities mean to open two new football fields with an artificial turf within the framework of the program on preparation and holding of the European Football Championship Euro-2012.

It is envisaged to build four football fields for friendly matches among fans of Euro-2012. Two of them have been already put into service. The same fields will be put into operation by the end of 2007. Kyiv will have to pay UAH 1.87 million (1 USD - 5.05 UAH) for the purpose. These four sport facilities will be used also as fan-zones with big monitors mounted in for the match viewing during Euro-2012. Some 200,000 of fans are expected to arrive in Kyiv for Euro-2012.

November 8, 2007

Euro-2012: Who will get the title?

Filed under: Ukraine — Ivan @ 3:21 am

By Daniel Bilak

 

As Ukraine winds itself up to co-host the European Cup in football in 2012, more than one title is at stake. In addition to the obvious, winning the tournament, the other title concerns land and what’s built on it. About a billion euros need to be spent in the next four years to accommodate the legions of fans who will attend the matches. And that’s just to meet UEFA’s requirements. By some estimates, Kyiv is experiencing a deficit of over a million square meters of living space each year, as people from all over the country flock to the capital. Indeed, we are witnessing a virtual explosion in property development throughout Ukraine, as shopping centers, apartment blocks and new housing developments continue to pop up around the country.

This flurry of real estate activity has finally attracted the attention of Europe’s major property players – large institutional and hedge funds, mortgage banks and asset managers interested in the significant opportunities presented by the Ukrainian property market. However, these actors play by rules different from those that have governed the market to date. In the past, many properties under development were conveyed through sweetheart deals between state or municipal authorities and their cronies, by taking advantage of incomplete and inconsistent legislation governing the sale and transfer of land. But unlike speculators, who look to cash out after flipping a property, or developers, who may exit soon after completing a project, institutional investors are interested in growing the underlying value of their holdings. In short, they require a clean, certain and stable title to the asset that they hold.

Therefore, one of the critical challenges facing the new Ukrainian government, whatever its color combination, is to improve the transparency and predictability of the Ukrainian property regime. Broadly speaking, this involves the following:

Implement a land title registry system. Nothing satisfies an investor like a certificate that describes your property in detail, stipulates that you are the owner and lists all of the private and public charges on the property. Best of all, it’s government-guaranteed! Sound far-fetched? Not at all. Such a system, backed by the World Bank and other donors, has been basically ready for implementation for about five years. The regime would involve merging the state cadastre (which provides the legal description of the land) with existing registers of legal rights to immoveable property (such as the register of hypothecs). Nothing, except a small amendment to the Land Code and bickering over which government agency will control the registry, stands in the way of establishing an institution that can ensure market transparency and predictability. As a result, financial institutions will lend money (secured by transparent charges on immoveable property) to businesses at lower interest rates, which will facilitate the development of credit markets and stimulate investment and economic growth.

Make land a commodity. It is time to finally remove the moratorium on the sale of agricultural land. Ostensibly put in place to protect villagers, this cynical piece of populist propaganda has allowed speculators to accumulate vast tracts of agricultural land through the acquisition of leasehold interests and lock-up deals with local village leaders, ready to be exploited once the moratorium is lifted. By establishing transparent zoning procedures and imposing a “use it, or lose it” tax on speculators, agricultural property can be put to its most productive use, and, with the implementation of the land registry, still protect the property rights of villagers. Traded like any other commodity in a proper manner, land will add value to a villager’s legacy, which is otherwise being beggared by the existing system.

Enforce transparent procedures for the transfer of land from state bodies. The flagrant violation by the Kyiv City Council on Oct. 1 of its own rules, in what has been called the ‘dereban’ of about 3,000 hectares of city property, is a striking example of the need to enforce transparency in the procedures governing the transfers of land title from the state. This includes clarifying, standardizing and unifying the rules and procedures in the Land Code regarding the auctions of land plots (much of which is currently left to the discretion of the local authorities). The foreign ownership restrictions in the Land Code should be scrapped all together as an anachronistic restriction on trade.

The European Cup is therefore an opportunity for Ukraine not just to build scores of new hotels and developments, but to secure the country’s future economic development. Political will is all that is necessary to implement these relatively simple measures. The security and enforceability of property rights will determine whether Ukraine can continue to sustain the dynamics of its current robust economic growth. As our neighbors, Poland, Romania and Russia have found, institutional investors and lenders represent billions of dollars of potential property investment. Along with Ukraine’s increasingly credible banking sector, they can also bring market discipline and create a virtuous cycle of investment involving other areas of the Ukrainian economy. But first investors want to see that the property they purport to own is worth the paper it’s written on. Who gets the title goes way beyond football.

Daniel A. Bilak is a partner with CMS Cameron McKenna’s Kyiv office.

Source:kyivpost.com

November 7, 2007

UEFA experts checking Poland’s progress

Filed under: Poland — Ivan @ 3:00 am

The first visit of the UEFA experts concerning the preparations for the Euro 2012 in Poland started in Warsaw on Monday.

“The UEFA divided the preparations into 8 sections. The present visit regards land transport, air transport and accommodation,” informed the head of the Polish Football Association (PZPN) Euro 2012 team Adam Olkowicz.

“After the inspection, the experts will prepare a report with conclusions and prescriptions.” said Olkowicz.

Other sections are medical security, safety, social communication, promotion and marketing, and sports infrastructure, i.e. stadiums. The UEFA wants to conduct visits concerning all sections till the end of the year.

The experts will visit all cities hosting the Euro 2012 – Warsaw, Poznan, Wroc?aw and Gda?sk (later, on November 19).

Source:thenews.pl

November 3, 2007

Poland’s future premier makes Euro 2012 finals his goal

Filed under: Poland — Ivan @ 4:12 am

Warsaw - Poland’s prime minister-elect, liberal leader Donald Tusk, said Tuesday he will take responsibility for Poland’s readiness to co-host the UEFA Euro 2012 football finals with Ukraine. “I’m taking responsibility so that Euro 2012 will after all take place in Poland,” Tusk told Poland’s TVN24 news channel.

“Over half a year, dilettantes have been deciding on this matter and we have to stop that in order to save Euro 2012 for Poland,” said Tusk, himself an ardent football fan known to enjoy kicking a ball around on the pitch.

The leader of Poland’s liberal Civic Platform (PO) and winner of Poland’s October 21 parliamentary election blamed the outgoing right- wing Law and Justice (PiS) government of Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski for dragging its heels on various Euro 2012-related investment projects including the construction of highway and transport networks as well as world-class stadiums.

Controversy erupted this week over whether Warsaw would manage to build a world-class stadium in time for kick-off in 2012.

Warsaw’s liberal Mayor Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz questioned the central location chosen by outgoing PiS Sports Minister Elzbieta Jakubiak, arguing it could paralyse the city centre.

Jakubiak warned that any change of plans would mean missing the deadline for the stadium’s construction and could see the first match of the play-offs moved from the capital to a different city, most likely southern Poland’s Chorzow.

earthtimes.org

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