Don`t be frozen out by global warming

Released on: November 27, 2007, 5:13 am

Press Release Author: Jim watson

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: Those looking to invest in French ski property in the ski
areas of the Alps, such as the major resorts of France and Switzerland ski property,
may have more to concern them in the long run than most.

Press Release Body: Those looking to invest in French ski property in the ski areas
of the Alps, such as the major resorts of France and Switzerland ski property, may
have more to concern them in the long run than most, it has been suggested. While
the quality of the property, location, price, rental potential and other normal
issues still apply, Ewan McGarrie, chief executive of brokerage and advisory service
propertyinvestmnet.co.uk, has warned that global warming must be high on the list of
considerations.

With the exception of a few die-hard sceptics, global warming is an accepted
reality, although of course some deny that this is a consequence of human activity.
Either way, the effects on Alpine resort areas are a matter of the reality beneath
the skis, not technical arguments about meteorological trends. Figures from the
Swiss Association of Winter Sports Resorts show that since 1995 the ski season has
shortened by 12 days. That is the kind of issue that both winter sports
practitioners - and property investors - need to be aware of.

\"A lot of ski resorts last year were empty because there wasn\'t enough snow,\" said
Mr McGarrie, adding that areas below a thousand feet were particularly hard hit,
with \"vast tracks of ski slopes that would have been busy just empty because they
were mud tracks\".

Mr McGarrie was quick to emphasise that this season has been better so far than last
year\'s notoriously mild winter. But, he suggested, the most important thing for
investors to do was to invest at higher altitudes where the snow was not at risk.

The alternative, he suggested, was dire: \"With temperatures changing in future
years, if you\'re not high enough up, your wonderful ski slope will no longer be a
ski slope.\"

Of course, there are those who suggest there are opportunities to be had from less
snowy Alps. At a recent conference in Innsbruck, various new tourism opportunities
were discussed, USA Today reported. Martin Price, director of the Centre for
Mountain Studies in Perth, expressed a similar view about skiing to Mr McGrarrie,
saying: \"Especially at the lower altitudes, it\'s definitely not an industry I would
invest in.\"
Instead, some at the conference suggested, various other forms of tourism could be
promoted.

It is perhaps possible that buy-to-let investors could, at least in some cases, find
properties in areas that would adjust well to other mountain area activities. These
could include activities such as mountain biking, which Scottish ski resorts have
already adopted - the Nevis Range has a world championship track and Glen Shee is
planning a course of its own.

However, the advice at the conference from one quarter was that snow at high
altitudes was definitely not in doubt and may even increase. Making this point,
Professor Hans Elsasser, professor of Geography at the university of Zurich, said:
\"One has to maybe think of climate change as less of a threat for tourism but as a
challenge. Panic is uncalled for.\"

Perhaps, then, the real lesson to be learned is that global warming is certainly not
about to kill the Alpine property industry. But it may change it.

Web Site: http://www.assetz.co.uk/

Contact Details: Address:Assetz House, Newby Road, Stockport,Cheshire,SK7 5DA

fax:0845 400 6010

email:linkexchangeseo@gmail.com

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