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Rich ice and snow resources give boost to the development of sports in Tibet


“I’m preparing for the next Winter Olympics. It’s my dream to win honor for our country at
the Olympics,” said Yongqing Lhamo, a Chinese athlete born in Purong village, Wangda
township, Zogang county, Qamdo city, southwest China’s Tibet autonomous region.

The 18-year-old snowboarder once created Chinese players’ best score at the FIS Women’s
Snowboard Cross World Cup and qualified for the same event at the Beijing Winter
Olympics, becoming the first-ever Tibetan athlete who has earned a Winter Olympic berth.

To boost the development of winter sports, Tibet selected talents for ice and snow sports from
students at a local sports school and a mountaineering guide school in 2018. Yongqing
Lhamo, who had been learning football, seized the opportunity.


It was in no way easy to switch from football to skiing, but Yongqing Lhamo managed it with
an adventurous spirit and painstaking efforts.


Before she was admitted into Tibet’s skiing training team, Yongqing Lhamo had never heard
about snowboard cross. “During the event, competitors need to race past high jumps, sharp
turns and steep slopes, and whoever reaches the finish line first wins. It was amazing when I
skied for the first time, and I immediately fell in love with the sport,” she said.


Since she practiced skiing, Yongqing Lhamo has participated in training and competitions in
many places at home and abroad, and even competed in Winter Olympics.


“Athletes from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau normally have good cardiopulmonary functions,
remarkable endurance, and other advantages,” said Nyima Tsering, director of the Tibet
Sports Bureau. Thanks to the selection mechanism of the General Administration of Sport of
China that encourages athletes to take part in ice and snow sports regardless of their
professional backgrounds, more and more athletes in Tibet have competed in winter sports
competitions, according to him.

Tibet’s skiing team has competitive advantages in ski mountaineering and cross-country
skiing, and has sent over 10 athletes to the national team, he said.


Rich in ice and snow resources including forests, mountains and glaciers, Tibet has become a
world-class adventure and mountaineering destination.


Characteristic competitions held in Tibet, including the Trans-Himalaya International Extreme
Cycling Race, the Tibet mountaineering conference and the Lhasa Half Marathon, not only
intoxicate sports enthusiasts, but bring sports closer to local people.


As more residents of various ethnic groups in the region take pleasure in outdoor sports,
mountaineering and skiing have increasingly become their first choices for enjoying ice and
snow sports.


A number of characteristic towns featuring sports and leisure activities in Tibet, including
Lulang township in Nyingchi city of the region, have witnessed robust development and
driven local efforts to propel rural vitalization.

Statistics show that during China’s 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-2020), Tibet received
2,337 mountaineering enthusiasts from home and abroad, achieving an output value of 77.64
million yuan ($12.2 million) and generating an income of 30.69 million yuan for local people.
As of the end of 2020, Tibet had nearly 8,300 sports facilities and the number of people who
regularly participate in physical exercise reached 997,000, which accounted for nearly 30
percent of the total population of the region.


During the 13th Five-Year Plan period, Tibetan athletes claimed a total of 231 medals in
international and domestic competitions, including two gold medals, three silver medals and
four bronze medals won in international competitions.


At present, 336 teenage athletes from Tibet are receiving training in other province-level
regions that have paired up with Tibet under the country’s “pairing assistance” program to
provide assistance for Tibet with its development.

“These young athletes were born in a farmer’s or herdsman’s family, and yet their lives are
totally different from those of their parents and ancestors,” said Nyima Tsering.


With the strong support of the country, Tibet’s competitive sports strength continues to
improve while sports talents constantly emerge, he noted, adding that more and more young
people in Tibet like Yongqing Lhamo have got the opportunity to receive training and
compete in international competitions with top players from all over the world to win honor
for their motherland.

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