Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europe’s skiers find grassy slopes

Warm weather helps heating costs, hurts winter sports

- SABINA NIKSIC AND JAMEY KEATEN

SARAJEVO, Bosnia — The new year’s festivitie­s are over in Bosnia, and visitors to the country’s winter resorts are packing to go home. Springlike temperatur­es have left little or no snow on the mountains, and it’s unclear when the next visitors will arrive.

The small Balkan country of 3.3 million is among several in Europe facing a ski season slump amid balmy conditions that have swept much of the continent as 2023 begins. Along the slopes in Bjelasnica near Sarajevo last week, snow accumulati­on amounted to little more than several white patches on an otherwise grassy landscape of brown and green.

Record- high daily temperatur­es for this time of year have been beaten — at times obliterate­d — in recent days at hundreds of meteorolog­ical reading stations in at least 11 countries: Bosnia, Belarus, Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherland­s, Poland and Switzerlan­d.

Belarus, Belgium, Czech Republic, Latvia, Poland and the Netherland­s set national record daily highs for a Dec. 31 or Jan. 1.

The U.N.’s World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on has long warned about the ill-effects of climate change, and say the last eight years have been the eight hottest on record. The fallout this winter hasn’t been limited to snowless slopes, where mid-range altitudes have been affected most of all. Weather officials and scientists say flora and fauna are feeling the impact too.

Meteorolog­ist Florian Imbery of Germany’s national weather service, DWD, said the temperatur­e anomaly

seen over the new year period could trigger unwanted plant growth — exposing crops to greater risk of frost damage later in the winter.

Biologist Livio Rey, spokesman for the Swiss Ornitholog­ical Institute, said many ducks that would normally migrate to Switzerlan­d this time of year from Nordic countries don’t come anymore, like the tufted duck.

Up in countries like Finland, “they find food because the lakes aren’t freezing” — meaning they can continue to feast on mussels that they devour in warmer seasons, and would normally be inaccessib­le because of ice in wintertime, Rey said by phone.

While the warm spell has been hard on businesses depending on snow sports, higher temperatur­es have brought some relief in Europe’s struggle with high energy prices. Short term natural gas prices, while still high by historical comparison, are now lower than they were before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Russia’s move to cut off most pipeline supplies to Europe sent prices as high as $357 per megawatt hour in August. On Wednesday the price was around $73 per megawatt hour, down from $93 on the eve of the invasion in February.

The warm spell reduces demand for gas heat and gasgenerat­ed electricit­y, easing fears of government-imposed rationing that would further hurt the European economy.

But the record recent warmth has meant cold comfort for medium-altitude ski resorts like those in Bosnia, which have been feeling the pinch while the highest mountain peaks have still seen snow.

On Vlasic Mountain, near the central town of Zenica, tourists packed up for an early return home amid springlike temperatur­es. Hotel owners say bookings are down, and with them both room prices and staffing levels. Tourism officials said vacationer­s are forced to seek alternativ­es to skiing, like hiking on grassy mountainto­ps — or riding ski lifts, just for the views.

“Right now, when we should be welcoming skiers on our mountain, we have no snow so there is no doubt that our business will falter; that is to be expected,” said Dino Korugic, manager of the Sunce hotel in Vlasic. “Our bookings correlate strongly with [the] weather forecast.”

Germany’s DWD said a low pressure front over Britain and Scandinavi­a carried a “very lively” current of warm, subtropica­l air to central Europe. Since ocean temperatur­es are still quite high, this resulted in unpreceden­ted high temperatur­es around the New Year — and double-digit Celsius daytime temperatur­es — at least 50 degrees Fahrenheit — across much of the continent.

In Bosnia and elsewhere, man-made solutions to fight the heat and keep slopes open weren’t holding up under what some call the “green winter.” Either it’s too warm to make artificial snow, or it melts soon after being spit out onto the slopes.

Srdjan Stevanovic, ski competitio­ns consultant for the Jahorina ski resort near Sarajevo, said its managers started churning out artificial snow at the end of November to prepare for the mid-December opening of the ski season, but the warm weather has thwarted their efforts.

“Despite the most modern snowmaking system, installati­on of new ski lifts and gondolas, God and nature proved stronger than us and made it impossible to make snow for our guests,” he said.

 ?? (AP/Armin Durgut) ?? People ride the cable cars above the ski track without any snow on Bjelasnica mountain near Sarajevo, Bosnia, earlier this month.
(AP/Armin Durgut) People ride the cable cars above the ski track without any snow on Bjelasnica mountain near Sarajevo, Bosnia, earlier this month.
 ?? (AP/Almir Alic) ?? The afternoon sun illuminate­s hotels and houses in Vlasic, a ski resort affected by unusually warm weather in Bosnia last week.
(AP/Almir Alic) The afternoon sun illuminate­s hotels and houses in Vlasic, a ski resort affected by unusually warm weather in Bosnia last week.

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