U.S. ski resorts using more ‘green’ power

Associated Press

DENVER November 02, 2006 11:37 am

Visitors to many ski areas this winter will find cleaner air and better views of mountain landscapes.
Not only are ski resorts pushing legislation in Washington to combat global warming, at least 45 resorts in 14 states from coast-to-coast are using clean energy for some of their operations. Sixteen are getting 100 percent of their power from green energy sources including wind, hydroelectric, solar, bio-mass and geothermal.
“I think we’re a platform industry. We have a bully pulpit to operate from. When you think of global warming the first thing you think of is snowfall and wintertime and how that changes,” said Michael Berry, president of the National Ski Areas Association.
Bear Mountain and Snow Summit will spend $6 million on emission controls, said Bob Roberts, executive director of the California Ski Industry Association.
Aspen will focus on global warming in three upcoming ads in outdoor magazines. “We did talk internally before doing this. We knew it was risky but we want skiing to be around for 100 years,” said Jeanne Mackowski, Aspen’s director of marketing.
The industry is trying to show individuals that they can make a difference, said Berry.
Colorado, which set a record for skier visits last year with 12.53 million skier days, will offer two new gondolas this year.
Breckenridge, the nation’s second-busiest ski resort, has built a gondola connecting the town’s transportation center off Main Street to Peak 7 and Peak 8. The eight-passenger facility, which can carry 3,000 passengers per hour, means fewer people riding buses to the mountain. The resort also has added the highest lift in the nation, the high-speed Imperial Express, which goes to 12,840 feet on the summit of Peak 8.
“It has already raised our profile. The thing the gondola does is connect a great historic mining town with one of the great ski areas of the world. You don’t get too build too many of them in your career. The Imperial Express on the top and the gondola on the bottom are two great bookends,” said Roger McCarthy, Breckenridge CEO.
Aspen’s Snowmass has installed a new gondola to carry snowriders from Fanny Hill to Elk Camp. In addition, the company is replacing the cabins on the Aspen Mountain Silver Queen Gondola with roomier ones with 360-degree views.
Rustic Wolf Creek is adding its first detachable quad — a four-seat chairlift — and remote Silverton Mountain will be open all year for unguided skiing. It had been restricted to guiding skiing until last spring.
Whistler-Blackcomb in British Columbia has installed a high-speed lift to carry riders to the Symphony Amphitheater, 1,000 acres with spectacular high-alpine views. The resort also has purchased Whistler Heli-Skiing, which services more than 500,000 acres of terrain.
Utah, which set a record for the third straight year with slightly more than 4 million skier days, has added several high-speed lifts.
The Canyons near Park City will grow to 3,700 acres with the addition of 200 acres of mostly intermediate to expert terrain that will be served by the DreamCatcher high-speed quad. The resort also is replacing the four-seat Tombstone Express high-speed with a six-pack that will increase uphill capacity 52 percent and reduce congestion.
Snowbird is opening a ski tunnel, the first of its kind in North America. The tunnel’s conveyor lift, at the top of the new high-speed Peruvian Express, will transport snowriders from Peruvian Gulch into Mineral Basin.
Deer Valley is replacing the Sterling triple-chair on Bald Mountain with a high-speed quad. Fourteen new snowguns will allow Park City to open more terrain in the early season. Powder Mountain is replacing its Hidden Lake double chair with a high-speed quad.
Stowe in Vermont will connect Mount Mansfield and its steep terrain with Spruce Peak’s gentler slopes with a Poma lift ride capable of handling 3,400 people per hour. Also in Vermont, a high-speed quad will serve Mount Snow’s new terrain park. Belleayre Mountain in New York’s Catskills has a new high-speed, too.

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Photos


This photo provided by Breckenridge Ski Resort in Breckenridge, Colo., shows new gondolas, called the BreckConnect, which link visitors from Main Street to the resort base areas. The cabins are the most modern gondola cabins in North America, featuring room for eight people with their gear inside Associated Press


This photo shows a general shot of the resort in Big Sky, Mont. A tram from the top of Lone Peak, background, which is the highest mountaintop, will take skiers to 212 acres of open bowl ski terrain that the resort has added to its property. This is one of many resorts nationwide gearing up for ski season Associated Press