Business Day

Shortage of snow damages Indian ski tourism

- Fayaz Bukhari Shivam Patel

A lack of snowfall has led to empty ski resorts and holiday cancellati­ons in the Indian Himalayas, with scientists linking the “unusual” winter to the El Niño weather phenomenon.

The dry spell in Kashmir has pushed skiers to skip the popular resort of Gulmarg, one of the highest in the world, and left hotels in the scenic region waiting for fresh falls to draw tourists to the panoramic views of snow-capped peaks.

Scientists said that this winter’s conditions in northern India have not been experience­d for about a decade, marked by the absence of snowfall in the mountains and biting cold made worse by thick fog in the plains.

“Fifty percent of the season is already gone,” said Farhat Naik, a Gulmarg snowboard instructor, ruing the sight of dry, barren land that would normally be covered in a knee-deep layer of snow. “We are now hoping for snowfall in the first week of February,” he said, adding that all his European and American clients have cancelled their trips due to a lack of snow — a blow to the tourism- and agricultur­efocused economy of the region.

Travel industry executives in the states of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhan­d also complained of cancellati­ons.

Bookings have dropped to 20% for Blue Poppy Resort in the ski resort of Auli, in Uttarakhan­d, its owner Kushaal Sangwan said. “Our cancellati­ons have jumped and people cancel [just] days before the booking if there is no snow.”

Winter snow and rain in northern India, including the Himalayas, are brought by a weather pattern known as the western disturbanc­es — frequent extratropi­cal storms that originate in the Mediterran­ean Sea.

storms during winter but they have been largely absent this season, said RK Jenamani, a senior scientist at the India Meteorolog­ical Department. “When there’s no weather system, how can there be [snow]?”

The disappeara­nce of western disturbanc­es is linked to changing wind patterns and rising temperatur­es due to the active El Niño weather phenomenon and also climate change, said Gufran Beig, a former chief scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y.

The current weather is unusual for this time, Beig said. “It’s January and it is still very cold in Delhi ... there is excess moisture in the air but there’s also no snow.”

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