Milano Cortina Winter Games back on track as concerns over snow ease – FIS chief

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FILE PHOTO: A general view shows the Olympic rings on the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium, which will host the curling, wheelchair curling, and Paralympic closing ceremony during the Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games 2026, in Cortina, Italy, January 25, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo
Olympics - Presentation to IOC members by Presidency candidates - Olympic House, Lausanne, Switzerland - January 30, 2025 Candidate to the presidency of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Johan Eliasch during a press conference Pool via REUTERS/Fabrice Coffrini

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PARIS, Jan 6 : ‌Preparations for the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics are back on schedule, with snow making and infrastructure work progressing well across all venues, International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) president Johan Eliasch said.

Speaking to Reuters one month before the start of the February 6-22 Games, Eliasch said recent cold temperatures had helped organisers address earlier concerns over snow farming and snow making at key sites including Cortina d’Ampezzo, Livigno, Bormio and Val di Fiemme.

“Yes, it has,” Eliasch said when asked whether his confidence had grown. “The preparations are advancing very well. We’ve had cold temperatures, which helps. And right now, it looks like ‌there should be no issue to complete everything on time as planned. So that’s very ‌good news.”

Italian authorities and organisers have faced mounting scrutiny over delays, funding gaps and climate-related risks ahead of the Games, particularly after a warm start to the winter raised doubts about snow reliability.

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Eliasch said snow security remained partly dependent on weather conditions but stressed that organisers had the technical capacity and resources in place to manage risks.

“We are in the hands of the gods but you also need the resources for snow making, and the capabilities that are necessary here are in place,” Eliasch said. “So from that perspective... it’s all looking good.”

He ‍added that contingency planning was standard practice at major events, with reserve days built into competition schedules to deal with heavy snowfall or adverse weather that could disrupt races.

“That happens all the time,” Eliasch said. “I mean, we’re very used to that. It happens during the world championships. Sometimes it happens also during the Olympic Games. And at this point, we have reserve days for the schedule so that if there are weather ​issues, we can delay the race.”

Eliasch also reiterated his ‌view that future Winter Games hosting should prioritise snow-secure venues at higher altitudes and rely on a limited rotation of established locations to reduce costs and improve sustainability.

“What is clear here is that snow security is very much tied ​to the altitude of the venues,” he said. “But snow security is only one part of that equation. It’s also about maintaining the venues, and ⁠that requires continuous competitions.”

“Make sure that we do World Cups ‌in these venues every year, and that will incentivize the local organisers to keep their committees together,” Eliasch added. “So we have the ​local competence and also to invest in the venues, the courses, whatever it takes. And that’s far more efficient than trying to reinvent the wheel in new destinations…”

He said a realistic long-term model for the World Cup could ‍involve “maybe realistically three, four, or five venues in continental Europe… maybe a couple in Scandinavia, maybe one or two in North America, and two ⁠or three in Asia.”

Asked whether any major issues remained unresolved ahead of the Games, Eliasch said: “Well, that remains to be seen. Hopefully not. We’re making good progress, ​but we’ll find out. No doubt.”

Pressed ‌on what mattered most at this stage, he added: “So far, the most critical issues are all on schedule and ‍that ​is what matters.”

Source: Reuters

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