Astana have kept their WorldTour licence, which the UCI asked its Licence Commission to revoke in February. However, the Kazakh outfit will be subject to unspecified special measures, agreed at a meeting in Geneva  today, and will be strictly monitored.

In a statement released this evening, the UCI said:

As part of the proceedings following the request for withdrawal of the Astana Pro Team’s licence, the Licence Commission today held a hearing in the presence of representatives of Astana Pro Team, representatives of the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) and representatives of the Institute of Sport Sciences of the University of Lausanne (ISSUL).

On the initiative of the Licence Commission, ISSUL were asked to propose special measures which the Team will be obliged to put in place at specific times over the rest of this season.

The team committed to respecting all the measures recommended by ISSUL.

At the end of the hearing, the Licence Commission announced the suspension of the proceedings.

In the meantime, the registration for the 2015 season remains in force. However, the Team’s licence is subject to strict monitoring of the conditions laid down. This monitoring will be carried out on the basis of reports transmitted by ISSUL to the Licence Commission.

The Licence Commission shall be able to re-open the proceedings if Astana Pro Team fails to respect one or several of the conditions imposed, or if new elements arise.

The full reasoned decision will be published in due course.

The UCI had asked the Licence Commission, which operates independently of the governing body, to take away Astana’s licence in February following a report into its anti-doping measures and its management compiled by the Institute of Sport Sciences of the University of Lausanne (ISSUL).

Astana, run by Alexander Vinokourov and featuring Tour de France winner Vincenzo Nibali as its star rider, put its case to the Licence Commission earlier this month at a hearing in Switzerland.

UCI president Brian Cookson, who warned last year when Astana was initially awarded it licence for the current season that the team was on probation.

That followed two of its WorldTour riders, the brothers Maxim and Valentin Iglinskiy, testing positive for EPO, and three failed drugs tests among its under-23 development team.

By keeping its licence, Astana maintains the right to participate in cycling’s biggest race’s, including Nibali’s defence of his Tour de France crown this July.

Reacting to the news this evening, the team said:

Astana Pro Team is grateful to the License Commission for the opportunity to present the team’s commitment to observing the UCI’s ethical criteria.

Astana Pro Team is committed to respecting all measures recommended by ISSUL, and to collaborate in the implementation of further measures that enhance our procedures above and beyond the UCI's minimum requirements.

Our focus now returns to racing.