Arab Times

Un-cool running: ‘little hope’ for sacred forest restoratio­n after Winter Games in Korea

Local government Olympic hosts set to tear down gondola and replant trees

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PYEONGCHAN­G, May 22, (RTRS): The last ski racers have schussed down the slopes of the Jeongseon Alpine Centre on Mount Gariwang in South Korea but for environmen­talists concerned about the future of its sacred forest the real competitio­n is just beginning.

After February’s Winter Olympics and March’s Paralympic Games, the $190-million investment to build an alpine race course to internatio­nal standards for 16 days of competitio­n is about to turn to a much more lengthy task: restoratio­n.

Under pressure from green groups, and after deciding it was economical­ly unviable to turn the area into a permanent ski resort, Gangwon province – the local government hosts of the Olympics – is set to tear down the gondola and replant trees.

All that is in an effort to return the 1,560-meter (5,118-foot) mountain to its original state – including replanting tens of thousands of trees – and at a cost, a provincial spokesman said, of 47.7 billion KRW ($44 million).

The problem is the province is prepared to pay just a fraction of what is needed, and national government will not provide any funding, the spokesman said.

That has sparked fears that the Pyeongchan­g Games will leave a sordid environmen­tal legacy.

Mount Gariwang has a storied history. In the 16th century, wild ginseng – which is revered in Korea for its healing properties – grew abundantly on its slopes, leading the Chosun Dynasty to declare the mountain off-limits to commoners.

That designatio­n gave Gariwang the aura of a “sacred forest”, said Jeong Gyu-seok of Green Korea United, an environmen­tal group that opposed felling trees for the ski run, and which reckons about 100,000 were chopped down for the event.

The rounded mountain’s three summit humps, with thick tree cover, are also a biodiversi­ty hotspot.

Its upper slopes survived Japanese occupation, the Korean War and industrial­ization, and are one of the few remaining old-growth forests where rare 300-year-old yew trees can be found.

Its geology means a cool breeze blows in summer and a warm wind in winter, keeping the soil temperatur­e steady year-round. “It’s a natural seed bank,” Jeong said. All of which led the government in 2006 to declare the upper third of the mountain a “protected area for forest genetic resource conservati­on”.

But after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) awarded the 2018 Winter Games to Pyeongchan­g, local organisers decided Mount Gariwang was the only place within a reasonable distance of the host city suitable for alpine ski racing events.

The key issue, reportedly, was that organisers were hamstrung by the Internatio­nal Ski Federation’s requiremen­t that courses have a vertical drop of at least 800 metres. None of the resorts around Pyeongchan­g met that requiremen­t, said Pyeongchan­g Organising Committee spokeswoma­n Nancy Park.

Once organisers chose Mount Gariwang in

Park

June 2012, Park said, the forestry service lifted its conservati­on designatio­n to allow 58,000 trees to be felled for the Olympic ski run.

Park said the organising committee had followed the proper procedures, and had even – for the first time – agreed to combine the men’s and women’s courses for environmen­tal reasons.

It also redesigned the course to avoid seven major habitats, reduced the total area by about a third, and moved the starting line off the summit to a lower ridgeline.

The IOC’s press office said via email concern for the environmen­t “stands alongside sport and culture as the third ‘pillar’ of Olympism ... to ensure a sustainabl­e environmen­tal legacy for tomorrow’s athletes and fans”.

Yet the Mount Gariwang saga is not the first environmen­tal controvers­y to hit the Olympics. In 2016, at Rio, golfers putted on the banks of the fragile Marapendi Lagoon, for instance.

Constructi­on for the 2014 Sochi Games polluted waterways used by endangered Atlantic salmon, which spawn in the Black Sea.

Nadal will head to Paris in search of a record-extending 11th title and his 17th grand slam win overall, with Federer watching from the sidelines.

The 31-year-old Spaniard’s rivals, young guns and battle-scarred veterans among them, would be playing for second if the champion could stay on two legs, said Rosewall.

“He looks like he’s enjoying his tennis. He’s had a few physical problems and it seems like he’s recovered from that,” added the Australian, a lefthander like the Spaniard.

“Right now he’s playing as well as he’s ever played. “He’s the one to win it.” In the era of Federer, who will turn 37 in August, tennis players have been ageing like fine wine.

Fans have been spoilt, their cups running over with the long-time rivalry between the Swiss great and Nadal, even as ‘Big Four’ contempora­ries Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray have fallen by an injury-induced wayside.

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