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Climate change threatens future of Winter Olympics and all snow sports, research suggests

Climate change is threatening the Winter Olympics and the future of snow sports by making conditions much more dangerous for athletes and participants, experts have warned in a report published a week before the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

The Games, which start on February 4, will be the first Winter Olympics to use almost 100 per cent artificial snow, deploying more than 100 snow generators and 300 snow cannons, working flat out to cover the ski slopes.

Written by researchers from the sport ecology group at Loughborough University in England and the Protect Our Winters environment group, the report pulls no punches.

«This is not only energy- and water-intensive, frequently using chemicals to slow [any] melt, but also delivers a surface that many competitors say is unpredictable and potentially dangerous,» the researchers said.

The Beijing organising committee has issued a sustainability report saying the Games' «smart snow-making system» could use 20 per cent less water than traditional methods.

Games organisers have also sought to counter fears that the events will put pressure on local water supplies by saying they will rely on mountain runoff and rainfall collected during the summer for their snow-making.

The research noted that climate change meant natural snow was becoming less plentiful in many regions of the world, and was reducing the amount of water available for artificial snow, putting the global snow sport industry at risk.

«Navigating erratic snow seasons — and rapid melt at low-level resorts — are now the norm for many competitors,» the research said.

«The risk is clear: Man-made warming is threatening the long-term future of winter sports. It is also reducing the number of climatically suitable host venues for

Read more on abc.net.au