Ski tourism is a major sector of mountain regions economy, which is under the threat of long-term climate change. Snow management, and in particular grooming and artificial snowmaking, has become a routine component of ski resort operations, holding potential for counteracting the detrimental effect of natural snow decline. However, conventional snowmaking can only operate under specific meteorological conditions. Whether snowmaking is a relevant adaptation measure under future climate change is a widely debated issue in mountainous regions, with major implications on the supply side of this tourism industry. This often lacks comprehensive scientific studies for informing public and private decisions in this sector. Here we show how climate change influences the operating conditions of one of the main ski tourism markets worldwide, the French Alps. Our study addresses snow reliability in 129 ski resorts in the French Alps in the 21st century, using a dedicated snowpack model explicitly accounting for grooming and snowmaking driven by a large ensemble of adjusted and downscaled regional climate projections, and using a geospatial model of ski resorts organization. A 45% snowmaking fractional coverage, representative of the infrastructures in the early 2020s, is projected to improve snow reliability over grooming-only snow conditions, both during the reference period 1986–2005 and below 2 °C global warming since pre-industrial. Beyond 3 °C of global warming, with 45% snowmaking coverage, snow conditions would become frequently unreliable and induce higher water requirements.
Abstract. Climate change is increasingly regarded as a threat for winter tourism due to
the combined effect of decreasing natural snow amounts and decreasing
suitable periods for snowmaking. The present work investigated the snow
reliability of 175 ski resorts in France (Alps and Pyrenees), Spain and
Andorra under past and future conditions using state-of-the-art snowpack
modelling and climate projections using Representative Concentration Pathways
RCP2.6, RCP4.5 and RCP8.5. The natural snow reliability (i.e. without
snowmaking) elevation showed a significant spatial variability in the
reference period (1986–2005) and was shown to be highly impacted by the
ongoing climate change. The reliability elevation using snowmaking is
projected to rise by 200 to 300 m in the Alps and by 400 to 600 m in the
Pyrenees in the near future (2030–2050) compared to the reference period for
all climate scenarios. While 99 % of ski lift infrastructures exhibit
adequate snow reliability in the reference period when using snowmaking, a
significant fraction (14 % to 25 %) may be considered in a critical
situation in the near future. Beyond the mid-century, climate projections
highly depend on the scenario with either steady conditions compared to the
near future (RCP2.6) or continuous decrease in snow reliability (RCP8.5).
Under RCP8.5, our projections show that there would no longer be any
snow-reliable ski resorts based on natural snow conditions in the French Alps
and Pyrenees (France, Spain and Andorra) at the end of the century
(2080–2100). For this time period and this scenario, only 24 resorts are
projected to remain reliable with snowmaking, all being located in the Alps.
Highlights
Provision of pan-European climate change impact indicators for ski tourism.
The indicators account for natural snow cover processes, grooming and snowmaking.
The indicators are provided for NUTS-3 areas by elevation steps of 100 m.
The indicators combine reanalysis and regional climate model projections (1950–2100).
The indicators are available freely through the Copernicus C3S Climate Data Store.
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