Professional athletes are pressuring ski chiefs to dramatically enhance winter sports activities’ sustainability, fearing snowboarding is changing into unjustifiable to a public more and more involved about local weather change.
US slalom star Mikaela Shiffrin and Norwegian racer Aleksander Aamodt Kilde are amongst practically 200 signatories to a letter to the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS), saying present environmental insurance policies are “insufficient”.
The letter arrives after heat climate and snow shortages wiped practically a month of racing from the beginning of the season, with pre-season coaching on shrinking European glaciers melting away.
“It’s about time to address a really important topic,” Kilde mentioned after incomes a silver medal in downhill through the snowboarding world championship on Sunday.
“We see also the impact of our sport,” he mentioned. “I want the future generations to experience winter and to be able to do what I do.”
The letter was written by Austrian downhiller Julian Schütter, an envoy for the nonprofit organisation Protect Our Winters, generally known as POW.
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Olympic cross-country snowboarding champion Jessie Diggins and Freeride World Tour champions Arianna Tricomi and Xavier de le Rue additionally signed the letter.
“This is our most important race, let’s win it together,” the athletes mentioned.
Competitors recommended a extra “geographically reasonable” race schedule to scale back carbon emissions from flights, citing how the boys’s circuit could have travelled from Europe to North America and again twice by the tip of this season.
“The races of Beaver Creek in November and those in Aspen in February are 50 kilometres (30 miles) away from each other,” the skiers mentioned, referring to the 2 Colorado resorts.
“Planning those two races one after the other would reduce approximately 1,500 tons of (carbon emissions).”
“The public opinion about skiing is shifting towards unjustifiability,” the athletes wrote. “We need progressive organisational action. We are aware of the current sustainability efforts of FIS and rate them as insufficient.”
The athletes requested the federation to shift the beginning of the alpine snowboarding season from late October to late November and the tip of the season from mid-March to late April.
“The seasons have shifted and in the interest of us all we need to adapt to those new circumstances,” they mentioned.
Sky News has requested a remark from FIS.
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