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MADISON â New Hampshireâs ski industry could see a return of an estimated 40,000 skiers and riders from Canada if that country and the United States allow the border to fully reopen this winter.
The COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of the border, but with increased vaccinations, Canada announced Monday it would allow fully vaccinated United States residents to visit as of Aug. 9.
While the United States has not announced any plans to allow Canadian citizens to come south as yet, it has the potential to improve tourism in the Granite State this coming winter.
The latest economic development study of the stateâs ski industry, conducted by researchers at Plymouth State University, indicated that about 1.9 percent of all overnight visitors to resorts here came from Canada.
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DURHAM By the 2070s, if climate change continues at its current global warming pace, New Hampshire’s southernmost ski areas could see snowless winters that are so warm that they’ll be unable to even make snow for skiers and riders.
That would be heartbreaking to Elizabeth Burakowski, a skier who has a front-row seat on the possible effects climate change might have on New Hampshire’s ski industry.
She is a climate scientist and research assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire. She, along with Ted Eynon, a UNH graduate and owner of Meier Ski in Colorado, participated in a Zoom video conference forum earlier this month devoted to the ski industry in the age of climate change.
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