Camelot’s tech partner IGT sues over National Lottery award to Allwyn

If IGT, which runs the lottery ticket machines, wins its case it could be awarded damages of up to £600 million, payable from the National Lottery’s good causes fund
If IGT, which runs the lottery ticket machines, wins its case it could be awarded damages of up to £600 million, payable from the National Lottery’s good causes fund
ALAMY

The legal battle for control of the National Lottery, which appeared to have been concluded in November when Camelot cashed in its chips, has been revived by the company’s technology partner.

International Game Technology (IGT) is suing the Gambling Commission under European human rights laws, arguing the regulator’s decision to award the fourth lottery licence to the Czech-owned Allwyn gaming group had cost it “marketable goodwill”.

A legal victory for the Italian-owned IGT, which runs the lottery ticket machines at newsagents, supermarkets and garages, could lead to a damages award estimated at up to £600 million, payable from the National Lottery’s good causes fund.

Camelot and IGT reacted to the loss of the fourth licence, which is due to start in February 2024, by challenging