Are the Dolomites at saturation point?
There is a version of winter in the Dolomites that graces the pages of Vogue. Cortina d’Ampezzo – a town where you can buy a down jacket from Moncler, a shirt from Gucci or a Louis Vuitton holdall simply by strolling down its central Corso Italia – is an epicentre of downhill skiing and has won multiple bids to host the Winter Olympics. It’s a busy upmarket area and this has come with a price.
Poor conditions in recent years have meant that as many as 90 percent of ski slopes resorted to using artificial snow, annually consuming approximately the same amount of water as a city of one million people – twice the population of the entire South Tyrol region. Italy uses more artificial snow than anywhere else in Europe – which exacerbates water shortages in the summer.
Dolomiti Superski has 12 resorts and over 1,200km of slopes. Further expansion is planned for the 2026 Winter Olympics, when Cortina d’Ampezzo in the Dolomites is co-hosting alongside Milan.
The effects of climate change are visible at altitude: Marmolada, the biggest glacier, on the region’s biggest mountain, has
shrunk by 80 percent in the last few decades. There are 14 fewer glaciers in the area than there were in 1900.
Winter holidays in the Dolomites must diversify to cope with a changing climate. And you can help, by finding a holiday that doesn’t need to be snow-sure to be splendid.