China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Bare ski slopes make for bleak climate view

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The climate is changing a bit, but what should we do here?”

The full extent of the climate crisis has been underlined by the decision to host next weekend’s Ski World Cup at the Swiss mountain resort of Adelboden on artificial snow, as unseasonab­ly high temperatur­es in some of Europe’s most popular and lucrative winter sports regions have left slopes bare of snow and instead showing mud and grass to the world.

According to a 2020 article in Forbes magazine looking at how the sector was being affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Alpine skiing industry is worth $33 billion each year, so its economic contributi­on to countries, including Austria, Switzerlan­d, France, Italy and Germany, is enormous.

But this year, it is weather rather than the pandemic that is threatenin­g to deal the winter sports sector a heavy blow.

On New Year’s Eve, Switzerlan­d’s national weather agency MeteoSwiss recorded temperatur­es in some parts of the country to be 16 degrees higher than normal. And at the Jura Mountains resort of Delemont, a temperatur­e of around 21 C was recorded.

“The climate is changing a bit, but what should we do here? Shall we stop with life?” Adelboden course director Toni Hadi told The Associated Press. “Everything is difficult.”

France also ended a year that saw forest fires and record-breaking heat in the summer with some of the highest winter temperatur­es ever recorded, backing up evidence supplied by the United Nations’ World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, or WMO, earlier in the year, showing that the past eight years are on track to be the eight warmest on record.

The final global weather statis

Toni Hadi, Adelboden course director

tics for 2022 are due later this month, but data published by the WMO during the COP27 climate summit painted a bleak picture of the health of Europe’s winter regions.

“In the European Alps, glacier melt records were shattered in 2022. Average thickness losses of between 3 and over 4 meters were measured throughout the Alps, substantia­lly more than in the previous record year 2003,” the organizati­on said.

Glacier ice volume

“In Switzerlan­d, 6 percent of the glacier ice volume was lost between 2021 and 2022, according to initial measuremen­ts … between 2001 and 2022, the volume of glacier ice in Switzerlan­d decreased from 77 cubic kilometers to 49 cubic kilometers, a decline of more than a third.”

Some Swiss resorts have opened up summer biking trails rather than relying on snow sports for their seasonal trade.

Even though snow cannons are being used to create artificial snow to allow skiing to go ahead, that too comes at an environmen­tal cost.

The BBC reported that Europe’s energy crisis had led to Switzerlan­d trying to preserve water to focus on hydroelect­ric power, and a study by the University of Basel said increased use of artificial snow in affected regions could send water consumptio­n up by as much as 80 percent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States