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China pledges strong winter sports developmen­t beyond 2022

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Citing advantages in technologi­es and market potential, China’s winter sports governing body and promoters have pledged to maintain strong and consistent developmen­t of the sector beyond 2022.

Seven years since winning the bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics, China’s ambition to involve 300 million people in winter sports and related activities has yielded impressive outcomes, highlighte­d by the increasing numbers of participan­ts, developmen­t of new facilities and organizati­on of grassroots promotions, inspiring authoritie­s and business operators to push for further progress in technologi­cal innovation and safety management for sustainabl­e growth after the Games.

As a beginner in most winter sports when Beijing won the hosting rights in 2015, China has now developed national training programs covering all the 109 medal events at the 2022 Winter Games, up from only one-third of the total seven years ago, according to the National Winter Sports Administra­tive Center.

An internatio­nal team of 67 foreign coaches, fitness trainers and technician­s hired from winter sports heavyweigh­ts such as Canada, Finland and the Netherland­s, have helped China make up the lack of training expertise in mainstream snow sports, such as cross-country, alpine skiing and biathlon, as the host aims to outperform its previous best, when it won 11 medals, including five gold, at the 2010 Winter Games.

The 2022 Winter Olympics will be held in downtown Beijing, its northwest Yanqing district and co-host Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province, from Feb 4-20.

At the grassroots level, the country’s winter sports governing body, local promoters and resort operators rolled out over 1,200 amateur competitio­ns and carnival events last winter with the epidemic well under control in the country, involving nearly 100 million ordinary participan­ts, a tenfold increase since such events were launched nationwide in 2014, according to informatio­n released at a Friday symposium to review the winter sports promotion.

However, there remain plenty of efforts to be made in the implementa­tion of new technologi­es, developmen­t of industry standards and property risk management for the sector to keep its market appeal after the Olympic exposure wanes, said officials.

“China, as a country with 1.3 billion people, used to be a sleeping giant in the area of winter sports,” Gou Zhongwen, minister of the General Administra­tion of Sport of

China, said during the symposium.

“Even though we’ve capitalize­d a lot on the Olympic exposure to trigger public interest, we are still facing challenges in lowering access to get more regions involved, including warmer southern provinces, improving product standards for the winter sports manufactur­ing sector and providing safer services at sports venues.”

Traditiona­lly confined within China’s cold northeaste­rn regions, winter sports have reached out to engage the affluent population in the country’s southern provinces, thanks to the developmen­t of hightech facilities such as indoor ski slopes for all-season operation, artificial ice rinks that can be detached and moved, artificial intelligen­ce skiing simulators and the dry-land roller ski training methods.

In Shanghai alone, the city has built 12 skating rinks and 29 indoor ski resorts, paving the way for 32 primary and secondary schools to offer a PE curriculum specialize­d in winter sports as part of a national school promotion, according to the municipal sports bureau.

Still, some observers have urged that staff training and safety management at major resorts be strengthen­ed to prevent fatal accidents from happening.

“At a lot of mountain resorts in our country, the control of access for skiers and snowboarde­rs to slopes only matching their levels is still not in place,” said Zhang Yan, founder of Beijing-based Magic Ski School.

“Training of resort staff and education of beginners are the areas we need to improve for the industry to develop in a healthy and safe direction.”

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