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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Philip O'Connor and Yiming Woo

Olympics-Heavy snow a welcome 'problem' for Beijing venues

Volunteers wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) clear away snow with straw brooms outside the Zhangjiakou media centre, during a snowfall at the Winter Olympics, in Zhangjiakou, China, February 12, 2022. REUTERS/Emily Roe

While athletes have been competing on artificial snow throughout the Beijing Olympics, organisers are now dealing with the logistical challenge of clearing away the real thing after heavy snowfalls in the mountains of Zhangjiakou on Saturday.

Brown scrub and brush on the hills around some of the mountain venues have made for underwhelming TV images during the Games but the snowfalls have blanketed the area white, while posing some issues for crews at local venues.

A volunteer wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) clears away snow with straw brooms outside the Zhangjiakou media centre, during a snowfall at the Winter Olympics, in Zhangjiakou, China, February 12, 2022. REUTERS/Emily Roe

"In heavy snow weather, one must not wait, it's a process of clearing as it snows," Shu Wen, deputy director of maintenance services at the Genting Snow Park, told reporters.

"It's all about preventing the use of snow-melt agents.

"Whether it is an environmentally friendly or non-environmentally friendly snow-melting agent, it all has a certain impact on roads and snow tracks. Our aim is to ensure that the entire stadium is clean and tidy."

Genting is the location for many of the freestyle skiing and snowboarding events at the Beijing Games, where a sound, predictable surface is a requirement for the breath-taking tricks and high-speed racing of the athletes.

Shu said his team are prepared for the heavy snow and freezing temperatures forecast for the middle weekend of Olympic competition.

"According to the weather forecast, we're expecting a blizzard today and tomorrow, and heavy snow," Shu added. "This situation happens frequently in our snow venue operations. We have a professional, top-tier team to make sure all goes well."

Early on Saturday, teams of professionals and volunteers were out clearing snow from the venues ahead of the day's events.

The opening races at the nearby cross-country and biathlon centres took place in temperatures lower than -10 degrees Celsius (14°F), and gusty winds made shooting on the biathlon range very difficult.

Temperatures climbed during the week but are set to drop again.

After occasional delays in some of the Alpine skiing and ski jump programs due to high winds earlier in the Games, Shu is confident that organisers can handle whatever the weather throws at them.

"This year, we are all set in our mountain venue team with additional machinery and manpower to ensure that we can face any strong winds situations that we can encounter, that at any time we can ensure the normal progress of our events," he said.

(This story has been corrected to fix second reference to Shu Wen's name in paras 7, 8, 12)

(Reporting by Philip O'Connor and Yiming Woo; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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