Alpine ski resorts have been plunged into crisis after half the slopes in France closed due to a winter heatwave in Europe. 

The unprecedented January ‘heat dome’ has produced temperatures ranging from 10 to 20 Celsius (50 to 68 Fahrenheit) from France to Western Russia – with several temperature records broken over the New Year weekend.

At least seven countries – including Denmark, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic – have seen their warmest January weather on record, while the Swiss resort of Adelboden recorded temperatures above freezing, even at 6,500ft.

Frustrated skiers have posted videos slaloming down narrow slivers of ice flanked by grass and sharing their annoyance over the lack of snow on the slopes.

FRANCE: Stopped chairlifts are seen in Annecy last week amid the European heatwave that has forced dozens of ski resorts to close. Alpine ski resorts have been plunged into crisis after half the slopes in France closed due to a winter heatwave in Europe

FRANCE: Stopped chairlifts are seen in Annecy last week amid the European heatwave that has forced dozens of ski resorts to close. Alpine ski resorts have been plunged into crisis after half the slopes in France closed due to a winter heatwave in Europe

Alpine ski resorts have been plunged into crisis after half the slopes in France closed due to a winter heatwave in Europe. Pictured: The chairlift of 'Le petit chamossaire' sits closed due to the lack of snow, at 2,000 meters above sea level, in the alpine resort of Villars-sur-

SWITZERLAND: The chairlift of ‘Le petit chamossaire’ sits closed due to the lack of snow, in the alpine resort of Villars-sur-Ollon

GERMANY: The unprecedented January 'heat dome' has produced temperatures ranging from 10 to 20 Celsius (50 to 68 Fahrenheit) from France to Western Russia - with several temperature records broken over the New Year weekend. Pictured: People ski up a thin sliver of snow using a T-bar lift in Lenggries

GERMANY: The unprecedented January ‘heat dome’ has produced temperatures ranging from 10 to 20 Celsius (50 to 68 Fahrenheit) from France to Western Russia – with several temperature records broken over the New Year weekend. Pictured: People ski up a thin sliver of snow using a T-bar lift in Lenggries

AUSTRIA: Sparse snowfall and unseasonably warm weather in much of Europe is allowing green grass to blanket many mountaintops, rather than the usual snowy peaks. Pictured: The Bergisel ski-jumping hills in Innsbruck on Monday

AUSTRIA: Sparse snowfall and unseasonably warm weather in much of Europe is allowing green grass to blanket many mountaintops, rather than the usual snowy peaks. Pictured: The Bergisel ski-jumping hills in Innsbruck on Monday

A map from weather tracking website tropicaltidbits.com shows the unusually high temperatures across central and eastern Europe

A map from weather tracking website tropicaltidbits.com shows the unusually high temperatures across central and eastern Europe

Patches of grass, rock and dirt were visible in some of Europe’s skiing hotspots – like Innsbruck in Austria, Villars-sur-Ollon and and Germany’s Lenggries. 

Resorts at lower-altitudes in France and Switzerland have been worst affected by the warmer weather and heavy rain, which has destroyed snowy slopes. Austria and Italy have slightly more favourable conditions but more snow is needed for skiing.

Many resort bosses are now in crisis talks about whether they can remain open, with The Times reporting that others are saying the ‘heartbreaking’ situation has forced them to close their slopes to skiers.

There are fears for the safety of guests, with doctors saying they are receiving the same number of skiing fall victims now as they would in Easter due to the conditions.

More than half of the resorts in France are now closed including at least ten in the French Pyrenees and scores in the Isère region of the French Alps. 

Yesterday the Swiss resort of Splugen-Tambo was the latest to shut in the country after the warmest New Years Day on record in some resorts. The resort of Adelboden recorded a temperature of 15C (59F). 

Pictured: Skiers speed down an artificial snow slope flanked by grass in the alpine resort of Villars-sur-Ollon in Switzerland on Saturday

Pictured: Skiers speed down an artificial snow slope flanked by grass in the alpine resort of Villars-sur-Ollon in Switzerland on Saturday

Frustrated skiiers have posted footage sharing their annoyance over the conditions during the warm spell

A video posted to TikTok shows snow-less slopes surrounded by grass

A video posted to TikTok from Switzerland shows snow-less slopes surrounded by grass as frustrated skiiers post footage sharing their annoyance over the conditions during the warm spell

As a result of the lower altitude resorts closing, those at higher altitudes are now bracing themselves for an influx of skiers hoping to catch some snow there.

An estimated 1.7 million Britons were set to ski this winter, according to travel trade body Abta, with the busiest period coming over the February half term.

Arnaud Lemercier, manager of the ski runs at a resort near Grenoble, described his ‘heartbreak’ after being forced the slopes.

‘The slopes are no longer skiable. We reached the end,’ he told France 3 regional television.

‘This is the first time that we have opened the pistes only to close them again in the middle of the season. There is a lot of disappointment among the staff.’

He said the resort has taken mountain bikes out of storage as an alternative activity.

The shortage has been particularly difficult around Switzerland’s Adelboden, which is set to host World Cup skiing on Saturday, and generally draws 25,000 fans for a single day of racing.

Course director Toni Hadi said that the race will be run on 100 per cent artificial snow this year.

‘The climate is a bit changing but what should we do here? Shall we stop with life?’ he said, noting that other challenges such as the coronavirus pandemic and war show ‘life is not easy’ these days.

‘Everything is difficult – not only to prepare a ski slope,’ he added. 

Wim Thiery, a professor of climate science at the University of Brussels, said the same jet stream that pulled cold air from the Arctic into the US has fanned warm air from subtropical zones into Europe. 

Warning about the impact of climate change, he called on people cut the use of fuels that trap heat in the atmosphere.

‘By the end of the century [it’s] just going to be over… skiing in the Alps as we know it,’ he said. 

‘In the future, these problems will get worse because the snow will continue to melt as long as the climate warms.’ 

Pictured: The top of the slopes at Le Semnoz ski resort, near Annecy, are seen last week as the resort had to close temporarily due to the lack of snow

Pictured: The top of the slopes at Le Semnoz ski resort, near Annecy, are seen last week as the resort had to close temporarily due to the lack of snow

Pictured: Immobile ski lifts are seen in Annecy, France last week as the resort had to close due to a lack of snow on the slopes

Pictured: Immobile ski lifts are seen in Annecy, France last week as the resort had to close due to a lack of snow on the slopes

People make their way through a snow covered landscape near the summit at the Nordkette in Innsbruck, Austria

People make their way through a snow covered landscape near the summit at the Nordkette in Innsbruck, Austria

Between France and Poland many parts of Europe were enjoying warmer weather. A map showed Poland racking up daily highs in the double digits Celsius – or more than 50 Fahrenheit – in recent days. It’s a sharp contrast to the frigid weather and blizzards in parts of the United States late last year.

Weather trackers described the heatwave as a historic event for Europe, and expressed their shock at its magnitude. Many also said it was the latest example of extreme weather events being seen as a result of climate change.

Maximiliano Herrera, a climatologist who tracks global weather extremes, called the temperatures ‘totally insane’ and ‘madness’, and noted that some of the temperatures observed were even uncommon in midsummer.

The heat wave is ‘the most extreme event ever seen in European climatology,’ Herrera wrote. ‘Nothing stands close to this.’

Scott Duncan, a meteorologist based in London, wrote: ‘The intensity and extent of warmth in Europe right now is hard to comprehend.’

On New Years Day, temperature records were broken in several countries.

In Poland, the town of Glucholazy hit 18.7C at 4am, warmer than the average low temperature in midsummer, while capital Warsaw hit 19C – demolishing the city’s previous January record of 5.1C.

More than 100 records were broken across France, with Trois-Ville hitting 24.9C – also a record for January. Ohlsbach, Germany hit 19.4C, a record temperature for the day, while Bilbao in Spain saw 25.1C, its hottest day in January ever.

Swiss state forecaster MeteoSuisse pointed to some of the hottest temperatures ever this time of year. A weather station in Delemont, in the Jura range on the French border, already hit a record average daily temperature of 18.1 degrees Celsius on the first day of the year, over 2-1/2 degrees Celsius higher than the previous record high for January. Other cities and towns followed suit with records.

MeteoSuisse quipped on its blog: ‘… this turn of the new year could almost make you forget that it’s the height of winter.’

Forecaster Anick Haldimann of MeteoSuisse said a persistent weather system that brought in warmer air from the west and southwest has lingered, locking in warmer temperatures expected to last through the week. 

While slopes above 6,500 feet have gotten snow, lower down, ‘the order of the day is patience’ for skiing buffs, she said.  

The Patscherkofel winter sport resort near Innsbruck, is pictured on Monday, January 2

The Patscherkofel winter sport resort near Innsbruck, is pictured on Monday, January 2

A hiker walks past stopped chairlift at Le Semnoz ski resort, near Annecy, on December 27

Hikers walk past a stopped chairlift at Le Semnoz ski resort, near Annecy, on December 27

Hikers walk past a stopped chairlift at Le Semnoz ski resort, near Annecy, on December 27

The start to 2023 picked up where many countries had already left off: Last year was the hottest on record in both Switzerland and France.

More broadly, the United Nations’ World Meteorological Organization says the past eight years are on track to be the eight warmest on record. Its final tally on global temperature figures for 2022 will be released in mid-January.

Next door in France, national weather agency Meteo France said 2022 ended with some of the warmest weather the country has ever experienced at this time of year – capping an exceptionally warm year that saw temperature records broken and rampant forest fires and drought conditions.

Meteo France says the southern Alps and, in the northern Alps, slopes above 2,200 meters, have seen close to normal snowfalls. But snow is notably lacking at lower altitudes in the northern Alps and across the Pyrenees, it said.

To be sure, the Alps cover a lot of territory and not all of it is bereft of snow: Perhaps counterintuitively, some of the best snowfall has been reported in the Italian Dolomites, to the south of the Swiss Alps.

Early in the ski season, fortunes looked bright for snow lovers: In France, freezing weather into mid-December raised hopes that ski resorts in the Alps, the Pyrenees and elsewhere might see plenty of early snow and the lasting subzero temperatures needed to keep runs open.

But exceptionally warm weather followed, prompting some resorts at lower altitudes to close down as snow cover melted away.

‘There was a good start to the season with a cold wave in mid-December which provided some white to pretty much everyone. Then, last week, there was quite a bit of rain and warm temperatures, so a certain number of runs had to close again,’ Laurent Reynaud of the Domaines Skiables de France industry group that represents French ski resorts, lift operators and others, said on C-News television.

Germany too has seen unusually springlike temperatures – as high as 16 degrees Celsius (61 Fahrenheit) in parts of the country on Monday. New Year’s Eve is believed to have been the warmest since reliable records began. 

The German Weather Service reported readings of 20 Celsius and just above at four weather stations in southern Germany, news agency dpa reported.

2022 will turn out to be warmest year on record for the UK, says Met Office 

2022 will turn out to be the warmest year on record for the UK, the Met Office has said. 

The average temperature for the whole of this year is on track to beat the previous all-time high of 49.7°F (9.88°C) set in 2014, the provisional data shows.

The exact figure will be confirmed in the new year, but the Met Office is confident 2022 will set a new 139-year annual mean temperature record. 

Since records began in 1884, all 10 years that have the highest annual UK temperature have occurred since 2003

Since records began in 1884, all 10 years that have the highest annual UK temperature have occurred since 2003

It has blamed the ‘persistence of warmer than average conditions’ throughout the year, while the record-breaking heat waves in July also bumped up the average. 

If the provisional data is correct, 2022 will sit at the top of the list of highest UK average temperature since records began in 1884. 

Currently, the years making up that list are, in order, 2014, 2006, 2020, 2011, 2007, 2017, 2003, 2018, 2004 and 2002.

Met Office also said UK temperatures in 2022 remained above average for every month of the year except December, which has been cooler than average so far. 

2022 has seen the coldest first two weeks of December since 2010 – an ‘anomalously cold start’ to the month. 

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