
If there is no snow, where do you ski? A new study warns
of the danger global warming poses to the ski industry.
A new study sponsored by Aspen Mountain and the Park City Mountain Resort warns that Colorado’s ski industry faces a grave threat from global warming. According to the authors, a warming globe will at best force ski areas to move to higher altitudes to reach snow and at worst, will find themselves out of business due to no snow at all.
Authored by University of Colorado at Boulder geography Professor Mark Williams and Brian Lazar of Stratus Consulting Inc. of Boulder, the study was recently presented to the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco. Mr. Williams said, “Ski resort operators are really scrambling. The bottom line is that in order to survive, these ski areas will need to find the necessary water wherever they can and hold it in storage to satisfy future snowmaking needs."
Assuming the future rate of CO2 continues at its current pace, temperature increases of 4 degrees by 2030 and 8.6 degrees by 2100 are forecast for Aspen. By the end of the century the authors expect this to cause the snowpack line - the elevation at which winter-season snowpack can be assured — will be 2,400 vertical feet higher up. This means ski lifts will need to be revamped and lengthened to reach higher up the mountains and a source of water for increased snowmaking capacity will need to be found as will a place to store it.
The study says Aspen may need to triple its snowmaking ability in the decades to come but getting all of that water to make that even possible then becomes a big question mark. We all know water is gold in our state and there isn’t much to spare, let alone extra for recreational activity.
While the study focused on Aspen Mountain, similar – or worse - effects could be expected at ski areas across the state of Colorado. Areas of the nation that have shorter and less extraordinary ski seasons could find themselves out of business entirely. In the western part of the United States, ski areas in California’s Sierra Nevada range and the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington are endangered. Out east, skiers in Pennsylvania and West Virginia could find themselves without snow.
The study will certainly give the ski areas reason for concern and global warming advocates something to crow about. Of course this does come on the heels of the report that Colorado’s current snowpack is at 116% of normal and many areas in the high country are reporting record levels of snowfall.











Comments
Interesting. It's such a seasonal industry. A couple bad seasons and I would think they will be gravely affected. Glad to hear snowfall is already high for this go round.
Tony, those temperature increases are quite high. I have to question the source, since even the IPCC has much more modest temperature changes. Have you reported on the groups that stated last month's record cold and snow were also due to Global Warming? I just cringe that any extreme article with make a headline for shock value these days. Not you- just a study like this.
I agree, Justin. This study's numbers are quite out of whack and extreme, even in comparison to other global warming alarmists claim. Certainly the source has to be considered with many of these. I should have noted that the Aspen Global Change Institute and the Park City Foundation are working with Aspen Mountain and Park City. Neither of those two would be considered 'impartial' to the debate.
The first red flag with this is that they predict a 4 degree rise in temps overall, but for no apparent reason, they cite a 10.4 degree rise just in ski towns. see skitownjournal.com, this group just needs more grants, so they escalate the alarm each year.
Park City Mountain Resort commissioned this study over two years ago to determine what the "worst case scenario" could be and what we as a resort can do to stop the impact of global warming. The great news is that there is a lot we can do, and you too. We have decreases/offset our Carbon Footprint by nearly 92 percent since this study. You can read about it here at www.parkcitymountain.com/sos.
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