Chinese children take up snow sports in run-up to hosting 2022 Winter Olympics
Authorities expect winter sports to be worth 1 trillion yuan by 2025
Aspiring figure skater Kiki Liu takes a lamp with her when she goes to practise, so she can finish her homework at the diner next to the ice rink and eat a quick supper between her sessions on the ice.
The eight-year-old has been training on the ice in Beijing for three years. Her mother drives her to the rink after school twice a week, where she practises for at least three hours.
On the days when Kiki isn’t on the ice, she studies ballet and other forms of dance to strengthen her figure skating.
“My daughter had pneumonia several times when she was young, so I signed her up for this ice sport,” said her mother Echo Wang, a full-time housewife. “She is seldom sick now and somehow we continue with the training.”
Winter sports were rare in China even two years ago but the country’s growing middle class has been turning to snow sports that are popular in Western culture, such as skiing, figure skating and ice hockey.
