Explainer

Paris 2024 Olympics: Everything you need to know as the start of the Games approaches

Paris will host the Olympics and Paralympics this summer, with thousands of athletes and millions of tourists expected to descend on the French capital. Here's everything you need to know - from the grand plans for the opening ceremony to whether bedbugs are still an issue.

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The countdown to the Paris 2024 Olympics is on.

The Olympics will take place from 26 July to 11 August and the Paralympics will run from 28 August to 8 September.

Consider this your ultimate guide to the Games - everything you need to know, updated as the opening ceremony approaches.

What is planned for the opening ceremony?

The plan has been billed as "an opening ceremony like no other": 10,500 athletes, 160 boats, a 3.7-mile route along the River Seine.

It is expected 1 billion people will watch the event around the world and 326,000 will be there in person - a downsizing of the planned 600,000 on security grounds.

The event is set to be the first Olympic opening ceremony held outside a stadium setting.

The parade will end at the Trocadero square, facing the Eiffel Tower.

How the opening ceremony could look. Pic: Paris 2024
Image: The opening ceremony is expected to end at the Eiffel Tower. Pic: Paris 2024

However, the best laid of plans may be upset by security threats.

President Emmanuel Macron has admitted the ceremony could be scaled down if the security threat is deemed too high.

There are "plan Bs, and even plan Cs", the French leader said. That could look like confining the event to the Trocadero - scrapping the river parade - or moving it indoors to the Stade de France.

The ceremony begins at 6.30pm UK time on Friday 26 July, and will be broadcast live by the BBC.

Problems with the Seine

The opening ceremony isn't the only Seine-related headache France is dealing with.

The triathlon could be delayed, or the swimming leg cancelled altogether, due to poor water quality levels.

Heavy rain could raise levels of E. coli in the water, making it unsafe to swim.

Testing of the River Seine found E coli and faecal matter. Pic: Reuters
Image: Testing of the River Seine found E coli and faecal matter. Pic: Reuters

Test results by monitoring group Eau de Paris showed that for all but one day from 26 June to 2 July, contamination levels were below the safe limit determined by the World Triathlon Federation for competitions.

But later, regional authorities released new results showing an improvement.

On 13 July, France's sports minister Amelie Oudea Castera swam in the river as part of a bid to demonstrate how clean the river is following a €1.4bn (£1.18bn) clean-up plan.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo took the plunge a few days later. She had originally planned to swim in the river in June but was forced to delay after tests indicated the presence of faecal matter was 10 times higher than authorised limits.

Amelie Oudea Castera and Paralympic triathlon champion Alexis Hanquinquant
Image: Amelie Oudea Castera and Paralympic triathlon champion Alexis Hanquinquant, who also swam in the Seine. Pic: X

The new sports at the Games

Breaking - also known as breakdancing - will make its debut as an Olympic sport in Paris.

Breaking athletes are known as B-Boys and B-Girls. The competition will feature 16 B-Boys and 16 B-Girls who will face off one on one.

They will be judged on five categories: musicality, vocabulary, originality, technique and execution.

Breaking joins other recently established "urban" sports including skateboarding, surfing, sport climbing and BMXing.

Breakdancer Kareem Gwinn, 37, of the U.S. participates in a workshop at Place de la Concorde to spread the love of the sport, to debut at the Summer Olympic Games in Paris, France, February 6, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Image: Pic: Reuters

Kayak cross, a canoe slalom event, will also feature at the Games for the first time.

Unlike existing kayak events where athletes just race the clock, in kayak cross they are racing each other.

The unpredicatable race involves athletes dropping into the water from a ramp, navigating downstream and upstream gates and performing a kayak roll.

Team GB athletes to watch

Britain is projected to win 66 medals, including 13 golds, according to a forecast by Nielsen's Gracenote Sports that puts the US and China as the top medal-winners.

Athletes with their sights set firmly on the podium include record-setting 15-year-old skateboarder Sky Brown, 1500m world champion Josh Kerr - who could be the first British athlete to collect the controversial $50,000 prize money for track and field gold medallists - and double Tokyo swimming gold medallist Tom Dean.

Catch up with our full list here.

Team GB's 'very patriotic' kits

Team GB's Paris 2024 kit goes back to basics with simple designs it says is "embracing tradition".

The Union Jack features on the sleeves of some parts of the kit - while other variations of the uniform are red, white or blue with "Great Britain" emblazoned across them.

Unlike previous Team GB kits, this version is not heavy on graphics or deconstructions of the flag.

Team GB

Games in a time of war

Russian and Belarusian athletes will be allowed to compete despite the ongoing war in Ukraine - but they will do so as neutral athletes.

That means they will not not be allowed to parade in the opening ceremony and will not have their national anthems played, or their national flags raised, if they win medals.

This decision from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has angered Moscow.

Mr Macron has also said Russia would be asked to observe a ceasefire in Ukraine during the Games.

Suspending armed conflicts under an Olympic truce during the Games was a standard practice in ancient Greece.

However, the Kremlin said Ukraine might use a ceasefire as an opportunity to regroup and rearm.

Some Palestinian activists and a group of 26 French politicians called for Israel to be banned from the Games over the war in Gaza, but the IOC said it had no plans to sanction Israel.

How is Paris preparing for the Games?

Seine-Saint-Denis, in the northeast of the capital, is the home of the Olympic Village, which will house 9,000 athletes.

The size of 70 football pitches, the village is split by the River Seine with a bridge to link the accommodation blocks.

After the Games, the village will be turned into homes for 6,000 people and offices for 6,000 workers.

More than half of the structures being built or renovated for the Games are in Seine-Saint-Denis, mainland France's poorest region.

While it's hoped the Games will leave a legacy of new and refurbished sports infrastructure in the suburb, dozens of squats were cleared in 2023 in what advocates said appeared to be a policy aimed at beautifying the area.

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Inside the Olympic Village

Transport preparations are also under scrutiny. The price of metro tickets will almost double during the Games, from €2.10 (£1.80) to €4 (£3.40).

The city's mayor Anne Hidalgo and the region's president Valerie Pecresse have been at odds over whether the capital's transport system will be ready for the influx of tourists.

Ms Pecresse - whose regional council is in charge of transport - said the price hike would cover the "dramatic" increase in transport, while the mayor has said there won't be enough trains.

Ms Hidalgo also said the situation for the city's homeless was another major issue.

"I don't want to take them out and hide them (during the Olympics). There should be a social legacy," she said.

France was accused of trying to "hide poverty" ahead of the Games, with police reportedly evicting homeless people from makeshift camps.

A shanty town next to Bordeaux's football stadium was also cleared according to the report by a collection of charities, which said cities were being subject to "social cleansing". French authorities denied the accusations.

Olympic torch journeys from Greece

Greek actress Mary Mina, playing the role of High Priestess, lights the flame during the Olympic Flame lighting ceremony for the Paris 2024 Olympics.
Pic: Reuters
Image: The Olympic torch is lit at a ceremony in Greece. Pic: Reuters

The Olympic torch was lit in an official ceremony in ancient Olympia, the spot originally used for the Olympic Games, on Tuesday 16 April.

It was then passed to the first torchbearer, starting an 11-day relay in Greece before the torch travelled to France, covering 7,500 miles in total over 69 days.

The French leg of the relay began in Marseille, where the sailing competitions will be hosted.

A total of 10,000 torchbearers will carry the flame across the 64 territories of France on its way to the capital city, where the torch will light the Olympic flame, officially starting the Games.

Will Notre-Dame reopen in time for the Games?

A night view shows the Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral, which was ravaged by a fire in 2019, with a new spire, surmounted by the rooster and the cross, as restoration works continue in Paris, France, March 30, 2024. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
Image: Five years after the fire at Notre-Dame, the church spire is now visible. Pic: Reuters

In a city of landmarks, Notre-Dame is one of the most famous, the cathedral's twin bell towers rising above the Seine.

It has been closed to the public for five years after a devastating fire ripped through the building, toppling the spire.

President Macron declared after the April 2019 blaze that he would rebuild the church within five years - a pledge many treated with scepticism.

While the cathedral will not be open to the public in time for the Olympics - the reopening is scheduled for December - the scaffolding has now been removed to reveal the new spire.

What about bedbugs?

Last autumn, Paris was in the grip of a bedbug crisis - although experts said the problem was just as bad in London.

Emmanuel Gregoire, first deputy mayor of Paris, called on Prime Minister Elizabeth Borne to act on the "scourge" before the Olympics.

"Bed bugs are a public health problem and should be reported as such," he wrote to her.

"The state must urgently bring together all concerned in order to enact an action plan appropriate with this scourge as all of France prepares to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2024."

After the initial panic, authorities said there was no trace of any unusual outbreak.

In March, a French minister claimed the bedbug scare was artificially amplified by social media accounts linked to Russian "disinformation" activities.