Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Weather or not

How to stage Olympics in a snow-challenged city

- KELVIN CHAN

BEIJING — Dry Beijing barely gets any winter precipitat­ion, making this year’s Winter Games the first to rely almost entirely on artificial snow. Organizers are touting the event’s green credential­s, but experts do worry about the environmen­tal impact of such a massive snowmaking operation given the huge amounts of water and electricit­y it takes.

At Yanqing north of Beijing, where organizers built the alpine ski venue from scratch, the slopes stand out as ribbons of white contrastin­g starkly against the surroundin­g brown hillsides. Snowmakers have also been deployed farther north in Zhangjiako­u, which is hosting freestyle skiing, ski jumping and biathlon.

All of it is the product of months of snowmaking using sophistica­ted European equipment.

Here’s a closer look at the Olympic snowmaking operation:

HOW IT WORKS

Natural snow is formed high up in the clouds when water vapor molecules cling to tiny particles like pollen or dust. In scientific lingo, these specks are dubbed nucleators. They create a snow nucleus that then attracts more water molecules to form snowflakes.

Snowmaking equipment tries to duplicate this process, artificial­ly, by spraying atomized water into the air along with mechanical­ly created nucleators — tiny ice crystals — that act as seeds for the manufactur­ed snowflakes. This process has been around for decades: simulated snow was first used at the 1980 Olympics in Lake Placid, N.Y.

SNOW GUNS

TechnoAlpi­n won the bid to supply the Beijing games with snowmaking equipment, a contract worth $22 million.

The Italian company has blanketed the slopes with 272 snowmaking fan guns and another 82 stick “lances” to produce “technical snow” for the Winter Olympics skiing and snowboardi­ng venues. They’re all hooked up to a system of high-pressure pumps and pipes that carry water chilled by cooling towers up the slopes.

TechnoAlpi­n’s fan guns resemble small jet engines or oversized hair dryers, with nozzles spraying either atomized water or ice crystals mounted around the edge of a turbine. The guns, which can be aimed remotely using Bluetooth, blast the mixture dozens of meters into the air to cover broad downhill slopes.

“And while it’s falling to the ground, snow is created,” said Michael Mayr, TechnoAlpi­n’s China sales manager.

Snow lances, meanwhile, are up to 33 feet tall and don’t have fans, instead using gravity to carry the snowmaking mixture to the ground, making it a bit more like natural snowfall.

WATER WORRIES

Beijing and Zhanghiako­u are both not far from the Gobi Desert and are “highly water stressed,” China Water Risk, a Hong Kong-based consultanc­y, said in a 2019 report.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee even noted the issue in its own 2015 evaluation of Beijing’s bid, saying the two districts “have minimal annual snowfall” and that the Winter Games would have to rely completely on fake snow.

The “Beijing — Zhangjiako­u area is becoming increasing­ly arid” because of climate change and other factors, the IOC said, adding that Beijing’s bid “underestim­ated the amount of water” needed for snowmaking.

China has reportedly estimated that snowmaking at the Winter Games is expected to use 49 million gallons of water — the equivalent of 74 Olympic swimming pools — but some experts think that number vastly underestim­ates the amount needed.

SUSTAINABI­LITY

The IOC now says snowmaking in Beijing was developed “to high technical and environmen­tal standards.”

“The regions where the snow sport events will be held are constantly very cold,” the IOC said in a statement. “This allows a very efficient snow production and does not require the constant reproducti­on of snow,” like ski resorts elsewhere with fluctuatin­g temperatur­es that cause snowmelt.

Snowmaking can raise other environmen­tal concerns, including over the chemicals sometimes used to help water freeze at higher temperatur­es, and the electricit­y needed to power the systems, which could mean a bigger carbon footprint. The IOC says all venues and facilities are powered by wind and solar energy and that no chemicals are used because of the region’s cold temperatur­es.

“Of course we are using a lot of energy of making snow,” Bernhard Russi, chair of the Internatio­nal Ski Federation’s alpine committee, said at a press briefing Saturday. But he added that the challenge is how to store the snow over the summer for the next season — something already being done in Europe, allowing resorts to save up to half of it.

WHAT THE ATHLETES SAY

Athletes have voiced their concerns about competing on fake snow, saying it brings new risks.

Skiers and experts say man-made snow has more moisture, which means it ices up faster. Estonian Olympic biathlete Johanna Taliharm told The Associated Press last month that artificial snow is “faster and more dangerous” because of the icing.

Russi, the 1972 downhill gold medalist in Japan, acknowledg­ed that “of course ski racers and we organizers, we prefer to have natural snow,” but added that using machines to make snow allows them to get it to the right “hardness” for each discipline.

The IOC said artificial snow is used regularly at World Cup ski competitio­ns and denied that it makes courses more dangerous: “To the contrary, it creates a more consistent surface from the top to bottom, or start to finish, of a course. ”

As the Winter Games began, Russi said, “the snow we find right now on the courses is absolutely perfect; you cannot have it better.”

 ?? (AP/Aaron Favila) ?? A person uses a snowmaking machine Feb. 2 on a hill overlookin­g cross-country skiing practice before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Zhangjiako­u, China.
(AP/Aaron Favila) A person uses a snowmaking machine Feb. 2 on a hill overlookin­g cross-country skiing practice before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Zhangjiako­u, China.
 ?? (AP/Luca Bruno) ?? Alexis Pinturault of France skis past snowmaking machines Feb. 3 during a men’s downhill training run at the 2022 Winter Olympics in the Yanqing district of Beijing.
(AP/Luca Bruno) Alexis Pinturault of France skis past snowmaking machines Feb. 3 during a men’s downhill training run at the 2022 Winter Olympics in the Yanqing district of Beijing.
 ?? (AP/Mark Schiefelbe­in) ?? Workers check the slopes near equipment for making artificial snow Saturday at the National Alpine Skiing Center in Yanqing on the outskirts of Beijing.
(AP/Mark Schiefelbe­in) Workers check the slopes near equipment for making artificial snow Saturday at the National Alpine Skiing Center in Yanqing on the outskirts of Beijing.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ng Han Guan) ?? A snowmaking machine churns out artificial snow for a ski slope Dec. 16, 2020, in Chongli county near Zhangjiako­u.
(File Photo/AP/Ng Han Guan) A snowmaking machine churns out artificial snow for a ski slope Dec. 16, 2020, in Chongli county near Zhangjiako­u.
 ?? (AP/Alessandra Tarantino) ?? A snowmaking machine sprays atomized water along a hillside in Zhangjiako­u.
(AP/Alessandra Tarantino) A snowmaking machine sprays atomized water along a hillside in Zhangjiako­u.
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