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Alpine skiing-FIS, WMO join forces to raise environment modification awareness

The International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have formed a new partnership focused on raising awareness about the effect of environment change on winter season sports and tourism, they stated on Thursday.

Their collaboration will also mark the first time the United Nations' WMO works together with a worldwide sports federation, with the contract entering into effect ahead of the 2024-25 winter.

Destroyed winter season trips and cancelled sports fixtures are-- literally-- the suggestion of the iceberg of environment modification, WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo stated in a declaration.

Pulling back glaciers, decreased snow and ice cover and thawing permafrost are having a major effect on mountain environments, neighborhoods and economies and will have significantly major repercussions at local, national and global level for centuries to come.

Warming weather systems and a much shorter season are threatening winter sports and testing the resolve of specialists and novices alike across Europe.

In the 2023-24 season, FIS organised 616 World Cup races among all disciplines across 166 places, however 26 were cancelled due to weather-related reasons.

European ski locations, such as Italy, have actually seen entire mountains snowless and ski centres deserted as rising temperature levels threaten the snowboarding industry worldwide.

The environment crisis is undoubtedly far bigger than FIS - or sports, for that matter: it is an authentic crossroads for humanity, FIS President Johan Eliasch said.

It is true, though, that climate modification is, put simply, an existential risk to snowboarding and snowboarding.

We would be remiss if we did not pursue every possible effort that is rooted in science and goal analysis. This is what we are attempting to follow and what is at the core of this promising collaboration with the WMO.

(source: Reuters)