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No snow, no problem: Arizona debuts first sewage ski resort

By | October 6, 2012, 10:32 AM PDT

Faced with shorter winters and warmer weather, one ski resort in Arizona has come up with a novel — if not somewhat icky — solution for keeping skiers on the slopes from November to April.

Following approval from a federal appeals court in February, Arizona Snowbowl, a ski resort in Flagstaff, Arizona, will soon become the first in the world to use 100 percent sewage effluent to make artificial snow.

While the repurposed wastewater will allow the resort to stay open longer (and subsequently make more money), the idea of sewage snow has drawn criticism from both Native American tribes that feel the land the ski resort sits on is sacred and environmental groups that worry about the snow’s effect on human health.

The United States Forest Service, which owns the land where the ski resort is, attests to the safety of the manufactured snow. The group claims that the treated water meets the highest standards, is just below drinking water, and is already used on golf courses, soccer fields and parks.

And while a longer season for the ski resort could benefit all sorts of surrounding businesses in Flagstaff, such a boost to the local economy hasn’t allayed the concerns of all scientists.

“We don’t know what effect freezing and thawing is going to have on the chemical compounds,” Catherine Propper, a scientist at Northern Arizona University, told the New York Times about the endocrine-disrupting chemicals she found in Flagstaff’s water during a city-conducted study. “We don’t know what UV is going to do to them. Some of the compounds will bind to the soil; some will get into the aquifers. It is a very complicated system that we know very little about.”

Resort’s Snow Won’t Be Pure This Year; It’ll Be Sewage [NYT]

Image: Sean Hobston/Flickr

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Sarah Korones

About Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2012 to 2013.

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones

Contributing Editor

Sarah Korones is a freelance writer based in New York. She has written for Psychology Today and Boston's Weekly Dig. She holds a degree from Tufts University.

Follow her on Twitter.

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones

Sarah Korones does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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+1 Vote
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My question would have to be...
...where was this waste-water going before it was diverted to the ski slopes? My guess is that it's the same place.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
8th Oct
0 Votes
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Discarded?
If they were using it for soccer fields and golf courses in the summer I imagine it was just discarded in the winter.
Posted by riverat1
8th Oct
0 Votes
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We Are Drinking It
The wastewater is discharged into sewer canyon in Flagstaff, it is then stored and recovered by wells. The well water from sewer canyon showed negative outcomes in tests for pharmaceuticals and organic contaminates. Flagstaff has done nothing to resolve this issue. This water needs another level of treatment and then we need to use it wisely.
Posted by annmariez
10th Oct
+1 Vote
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Ridiculous Hand-wringing with an agenda
The wastewater treatment output in the area has been watering local golf courses there for years. That irrigation water then is leached back into the aquifers and current groundwater supply and pumped up for the usual processes to get drinking water. If there was an actual problem, we would have already seen it at the golf courses.

This is just a narrative designed to reduce traffic at this ski mountain in favor of a tribally-owned resort a few miles away. How come this isn't part of the story?
Posted by jimbo.starr
8th Oct
+1 Vote
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Well, it certainly motivates one not to fall while skiing
nt
Posted by sullivanjc
8th Oct
+1 Vote
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PR nightmare
How could they not see this as a PR nightmare?
Totally different than a golf course. Sewage snow!
Some things just aren't worth the effort.
Posted by harrim47
8th Oct
+1 Vote
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Snow from sewage a risk
I take a thyroid hormone and it is .175 milligrams, a tiny amount. It takes very little hormone to alter the balance of various systems in the body and doctors are very careful how much is dispensed. I'm concerned about all this sort of thing going out in runoff water, the long term effects on people and animals. Might it come back to pee on their parade?
Posted by radiodog4@...
8th Oct
0 Votes
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Water Quality
You can bet it will be tertiary treated waste water (pretty much drinking water standards). I'd say you'd be better falling in that snow with your mouth open than kayakers in most rivers downstream of cities doing a roll over....
Posted by GregGold
8th Oct
0 Votes
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I'm curious...
Just what color is the snow?
Posted by Mojak66
8th Oct
0 Votes
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couldn't help myself
Well, the obvious joke is **** Skis, but I won't make it ;')
Posted by James Mooney
8th Oct
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