Nortel remains committed to sponsorship and support for the 2010 winter Olympic Games even though on Friday it was removed as sponsor for the 2012 summer Games in London, according to the EE Times.

"We remain fully committed to the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games," Nortel said

Nortel, which is based in Canada and employs some 2,000 people in the Triangle, filed for bankruptcy in January.

Concerns about the company’s financial stability led the organizers of the London games to replace Nortel with Cisco as a sponsor and provider of networking services. The move will cost organizers $19.4 million in revenue.

Nortel, which has begun selling off its assets, could no longer provide the network infrastructure services required for the games, the London 2012 organizing committee said.

While Nortel was a "tier one" sponsor providing around $65 million in cash and services, Cisco will only be a "tier two" provider.

Cisco will fulfill all of Nortel’s obligations, but London organizers estimate that it will provide about $20 million less in cash.

"Nortel acknowledges our fixed deadlines and our desire to have a single supplier for our entire network infrastructure have been impacted by Nortel’s decision to move towards standalone businesses," London 2012 chief executive Paul Deighton said. "This is in no way a reflection of their capabilities – this is all about meeting our fixed deadlines."

Organizers have raised almost $810 million by signing up 20 sponsors providing services and cash. The sponsorship target is between $1.05 billion and $1.13 billion.

Nortel, a company with a 127-year history in Canada, became the first major technology company to seek bankruptcy protection in the global downturn in January.

Nortel is in advanced talks to sell the rest of its operations after Nokia Siemens Networks agreed to buy some wireless operations.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)