Friday, December 26, 2008

Global warming puts skiers in dilemma















Italian Nadia Fanchini makes a turn

while on her way to winning the World Cup Women's Alpine Super-G skiing

race in Lake Louise, Alberta December 7, 2008.(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery



BEIJING, Dec. 25 (Chinese media) -- While skiers are

becoming more penny-pinching against the backdrop of international financial

crisis, many have begun to criticize skiing resorts for threatening environment.



It is obvious that snow fall gets less, winter

becomes shorter and temperature climbs higher.

"This is bad news for skiers. Snow to skiing is water

to swimming," said an avid skier.

Meanwhile, with less natural snow, skiing resorts

artificially produce snow to keep their business alive, which has been blamed by

many environmentalists for creating possible pollution by disseminating

chemicals in manufactured snow flakes.

In a recent skiing match in China's northeastern

Jilin Province, which has earned the reputation as a heaven in China for skiing,

several high-power snow-making machines were working in full gear to produce

sufficient snow for skiing, despite a big fall on the first day of the

competition, China Youth Daily reported on Wednesday.

Zhao Yinggang, an official of China's General

Administration of Sport, said that the change in the snow is not only in

quantity, but also in quality. The shape of snow has become irregular, falling

far short of the quality of snow for skiing.

Man-made snow may have been a solution to the

problem, but its high consumption of energy and the increasing dependence of the

resorts are downsides.

In Beijing, China's capital where 16 million people

live, the warming and shortening winter is hitting the city's skiing resorts

hard. The business of Yang Hua, a resort owner, is shrinking. He said that

skiers regard a low temperature as the benchmark to favorable skiing conditions.

Because of the warmer and shorter winter, fewer and fewer visitors were going,

he said.

In addition, the resorts' heavy dependence on

man-made snow is not viable financially or environmentally.

According to Yang, some resorts in Beijing are seeing

huge losses this winter and several have even closed.

Snow-making's huge cost in electricity would

intensify global warming, for it means more release of greenhouse gases,

environmentalists said.

The concerns over skiing are shared by professional

skiers. Han Xiaopeng, China's first skiing Olympic gold medalist, said that the

warming may cause a decline in the sport's popularity.

"Our beloved skiing is being threatened," said a

written proposal by the world's prominent skiers. They made the appeal at the

beginning of this month at a UN conference on climate change in Poland.

For the worried fans, Mr. Zhao's take of the current

dilemma might be of some comfort. With the advancement of technologies,

snowing-making will become environment-friendly, he said.

The China Youth Daily article said that as a victim

of global warming, skiing should not be blamed for the rising temperature. The

only hope lies in the global temperature returning to normal in the future.

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