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Cycling tops Sport England funding list with £32m - but much more on way from Government in New Year

Major investment in grassroots sport from 2013-17 - and £100m+ on the way from the Government

Cycling, Great Britain’s most successful sport at the London 2012 Olympic Games, tops the list of sports funding announced today by Sport England, with British Cycling getting £32 million over the period 2013-17 to fund grassroots initiatives. There’s more cash on the way for everyday cycling too, between £100 million and £150 million of it.

Transport Minister Norman Baker has previously said that Prime Minister David Cameron will be making a major announcement on cycling in the new year.

Carlton Reid, executive editor of BikeBiz, who is plugged into a number of government sources, says he has it on “good authority” that £100 million-plus - perhaps as much as £150 million, the details are still being ironed out - will be made available.

The announcement of the funding was originally due to have been made last month, but will now be revealed by Cameron and his deputy, Nick Clegg, in February or March and is additional to money already announced.

It’s still a lot less than the annual spend estimated at between £10 and £20 that is said to go on cycling in the Netherlands, but it would be a step in the right direction.

With three British riders – Sir Chris Hoy, Mark Cavendish and now, Bradley Wiggins – having won BBC Sports Personality of the Year in the past five years, the funding announced today, which puts cycling ahead of football on £30 million, amply demonstrates that cycling can no longer be viewed as a minority sport.

During the last round of Sport England funding, from 2009-13, cycling got £24.7 million, putting it behind football, rugby union and cricket, which headed the list with £35.2 million, although that has been slashed now to £20.0 million. A full sport-by-sport breakdown can be found here.

Welcoming the funding, British Cycling chief executive Ian Drake said: “Today’s Sport England funding announcement is a recognition of the good work done by British Cycling members and volunteers in driving grassroots participation and a challenge for us to do even better in the next four years.

“Whether it is for winning medals or for getting people active, we are proud of our record of delivering value for lottery funding and we take the responsibility very seriously.

“There is still a great deal of work to do in making cycling in this country better. We’re looking forward to getting stuck in.”

Included in the £32 million of funding is £6.4 million to develop young talent – some 3,000 riders will benefit, with the very best potentially going on to ride at the Olympic or Parlalympic Games – and £7 million that will go towards improving facilities, including traffic-free cycling centres.

Sport England Director of Sport, Phil Smith, commented: “British Cycling has already got hundreds of thousands of people back on their bikes and we’re backing their vision to inspire even more people to ride their bikes more often over the coming four years. We will also continue to invest heavily in the sport’s excellent work with talented young riders that has helped to produce champions such as Laura Trott and Jason Kenny in recent years.

“We also welcome British Cycling’s commitment to work with other cycling organisations and local authorities.”

According to British Cycling, its key grassroots achievements for 2009-13 include:

· Rise in participation - Over 200,000 more people are now cycling at least once per week than were in October 2011. British Cycling is exceeding the ambitious growth target set by Sport England four years ago by over 75,000. This brings the total number of people in England now cycling at least once per week to just under two million.

· Women’s cycling - The number of women cycling has risen dramatically in the last 12 months – almost 63,000 more women are cycling regularly. British Cycling’s Breeze programme offering female-only led bike rides has contributed to this rise, as have the inspirational performances by our female cyclists this year.

· Inclusive sport - Participation amongst the number of people with a long term disability has also increased by almost 15,000 in the last 12 months.
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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4 comments

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Joe Dunckley | 11 years ago
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"so what has changed since the autumn statement that this money has suddenly appeared?"

Nothing has changed. Cycling money is still less than a rounding error on the national budget.

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antonio | 11 years ago
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'so what has changed since the autumn statement that this money has suddenly appeared?'
Elderly and infirm benefit capping?

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Campag_10 | 11 years ago
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@mrmo

I think the Sport England funding was always in the budget – what's new is the reallocation between sports.

We'll have to wait and see where the new £100-150m comes from. The headline figure is likely to be spread over a number of years and is actually small change in the total 2012 spend of £683bn – (0.02% assuming the £150m is spent in one year, which is unlikely).

Avatar
mrmo | 11 years ago
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so what has changed since the autumn statement that this money has suddenly appeared?

Bigger question will it be spent on cycling facilities or on traffic calming mascerading as cycling facilities?

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