Travel
‘Devastating’: Christmas in Lapland is cancelled after trips called off due to lack of snow
As Lapland basks in mild winter temperatures, the lack of snow leaves travel plans in tatters.
For some unlucky travellers, Christmas has been abruptly cancelled.
Huge German holiday firm TUI has begun scrapping some of its wildly popular Lapland trips as an essential element is missing: snow.
Towns like Rovaniemi, the ‘official home of Santa’, have experienced unseasonably mild conditions over the past few weeks. Rather than the typical 20-30cm of snow on the ground, November saw no more than a couple of centimetres in isolated patches, with most of the region devoid of the white stuff entirely.
On 3 and 4 December 2024, TUI cancelled several trips to Kuusamo in Finnish Lapland due to a lack of snow. Heavy rainfall in the area washed away what little snow remained, making it impossible to undertake many of the wintry excursions planned for visitors.
Why are Lapland trips cancelled?
In a statement released on Tuesday 4 December, the travel company said,
“We’ve been closely monitoring the weather forecast in Kuusamo. Unfortunately, there has been heavy rainfall today and what snow there was, has washed away.
“This means that, regretfully, it won’t be possible to operate the magical Lapland experience we had planned for you, including tasters and pre-booked excursions. We understand how devastating this news will be, and we are really sorry to have reached this outcome.”
Affected guests have been offered the option to change their travel dates, including to next winter, at no additional cost, to rebook onto another holiday with a 10 per cent discount, or to get a full refund for their trip.
Other travel agents are monitoring the weather closely, and some areas are using snow cannons to ensure their visitors have the magical winter experience they planned.
Lapland: A popular winter destination
A few decades ago, travelling to Lapland to visit Santa was something kids could only dream about. But today, thanks to hundreds of new air connections to European countries, a magical visit to the real home of St. Nick is just a ticket away.
Finnavia, the operator of Finnish airports, noted that last year over 1.5 million visitors arrived in Finnish Lapland, 20 per cent more than the previous year. In November and December alone, Rovaniemi, Kittilä, Ivalo, Kuusamo, and Kemi-Tornio airports saw 547,773 passengers pass through.
As well as Finland, Swedish Lapland has seen record visitor numbers in recent years. In the county of Norrbotten, home to Lapland, winter tourism increased by 9 per cent in 2023, with the town of Kiruna – home to the famous ICEHOTEL – seeing 50,000 more guest nights compared with the previous year.
Many visitors arrive anticipating days of chilly fun – dog sleds, snowmobiling, reindeer safaris. With little to no snow in some areas, activities like this become impossible. Even the reindeer are struggling to retrieve their favourite food, lichen, from beneath layers of packed ice.
Will there be any snow in Lapland this Christmas?
According to travel company J2SKI, very little snow is expected in Lapland over the coming days.
The next snowfall is anticipated on 6 December, and over the next week, ski areas are expected to receive between 2 and 6cm of snow. While it is possible to ski and sled on smaller depths of snow like this, the packed ice underneath is likely to make conditions unfavourable for many popular winter activities.
Is climate change hitting Lapland?
It’s not just the winter that has been mild in Scandinavia. Finnish Lapland saw the warmest summer on record this year, with June, July, and August recording record temperatures at almost all weather stations in the Northern parts of the country. On average, temperatures were 2 to 3.5 degrees C higher than the average.
Finland’s Meteorological Institute blames climate change for the heat, with researcher Mika Rantanen telling news agency AFP, “The minimum temperatures were very high in Lapland… there were no cold spells at all.”
At the end of October, Lapland was experiencing an unusually warm spell, with temperatures in Kilpisjärvi soaring to 11.2 degrees C. The average high for the region in October is just 2.8 degrees C. And in November, the town of Utsjoki recorded temperatures of 11 degrees C, breaking the previous record high set in 1975.
Jim Dale, founder and Senior Meteorological Consultant at British Weather Services told Euronews Travel that climate change is to blame. He said, “Over the past 20 years, there has been a regression of European snow, punctuated by occasional very large falls and also sudden thaws that have often made for dangerous conditions. That is climate change inspired without a shadow of a doubt.”
Dale explained that, with more moisture in the atmosphere, snowfalls are bigger when the air is cold enough. This sort of famine-to-feast scenario is a pattern he sees continuing in the future. “That isn’t to say there won’t be ordinary seasons when everything appears as it was – that’s the natural flow of weather. But it’s all underscored by climate change and the unpredictability and chaos that it can and will bring,” he added.
Sharron Livingston, travel expert and founder of The Travel Magazine, told Euronews Travel it’s not just Lapland suffering.
“The lack of snow is not unique to Rovaniemi. In 2023, the Alps around Switzerland, Italy, and France had an unusually mild winter, and there was a deficit of snow in low altitudes. It may be due to climate change or just the way it is currently and could change.”
Travel
UK changes travel advice for Israel: Where is it safe to visit in the Middle East right now?
Travel advisories have been lifted after they were imposed 15 months ago in October 2023.
The UK Foreign Office (FCDO) changed official travel advice which warned against “all travel” or “all but essential travel” to the majority of Israel.
Travel advisories have changed for key tourist destinations including Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Eilat, the Dead Sea, Galilee and Haifa. Visitors are now only advised to check advice before they travel to these areas.
The FCDO still advises against all but essential travel to areas within some parts of Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories including Gaza and the West Bank. It also advises against travel to areas within 500 metres of the border with Syria and Gaza.
FCDO advises against all but essential travel to the area between the Lebanon border and (but not including) Route 89 excluding Nahriyyah.
Travel advisories have been lifted after they were imposed 15 months ago in October 2023.
The updated advice says the frequency of rocket attacks has decreased significantly but warns that there is “increased risk of political tension” which could cause demonstrations and clashes around anniversaries of significant events.
“The Israeli government declared a state of emergency across the whole country on 7 October [2023] and this remains in place,” the FCDO says. It adds that international air and land borders could close at short notice and visitors should check the latest information before they travel.
Is it safe to travel to Egypt?
Escalating tensions in the region have left many concerned about travelling to neighbouring countries.
Despite lifting travel warnings for Israel, the FCDO still advises against visiting large areas of Egypt. This includes within 20km of the Egypt-Libya border – except for the town of El Salloum, where it advises against all but essential travel – and the North Sinai Governorate.
The FCDO advises against all but essential travel to the northern part of the South Sinai Governorate, beyond the St Catherine-Nuweibaa road, except for the coastal areas along the west and east of the peninsula.
Its advice is the same for the Ismailiyah Governorate east of the Suez Canal, the Hala’ib Triangle, the Bir Tawil Trapezoid and the area west of the Nile Valley and Nile Delta regions, except for:
- Luxor, Qina, Aswan, Abu Simbel and the Valley of the Kings
- the Faiyum Governorate
- the coastal areas between the Nile Delta and Marsa Matruh
- the Marsa Matruh-Siwa road
- the oasis town of Siwa
- the Giza Governorate north-east of the Bahariya Oasis
- the road between Giza and Farafra (but FCDO advises against all but essential travel on the road between Bahariya and Siwa)
- Bahariya Oasis, Farafra, the White Desert and Black Desert
Is it safe to travel to Lebanon right now?
Lebanon lies to the north of Israel and shares a border. Despite a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanese Hizballah coming into force on 27 November, the FCDO says the security environment remains unpredictable.
It advises against all travel to Lebanon and urges Britons to leave by commercial means. Foreign offices in other European countries, including Ireland and France, have also advised against all travel to the country.
Is it safe to travel to Syria right now?
The FCDO advises against all travel to Syria due to “ongoing conflict and unpredictable security conditions”. It urges all British nationals to leave the country by any practical means.
The Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad fell in early December, bringing a shocking end to his family’s 50-year reign following an offensive by Islamist rebels.
Is it safe to travel to Jordan right now?
Jordan shares a border with Israel and the West Bank as well as with Syria.
The FCDO advises against all travel to within 3km of the border with Syria but borders remain open and most tourist destinations in Jordan have been unaffected by the instability.
Some flights to Amman and Aqaba airports have been affected so it is worth checking before you travel.
Travel
Switzerland unveils the world’s steepest cable car leading up to James Bond revolving restaurant
Each car hangs from an 11-metre arm to cope with the incredibly steep incline.
The world’s steepest cable car has just opened in Switzerland’s Bernese Alps.
Connecting the village of Stechelberg on the valley floor with Mürren, the track has a gradient of 159.4 per cent.
The journey takes just four minutes to climb 775 metres over a track nearly 1,194 metres in length.
The two cars hang from an 11-metre-long arm to cope with the steep incline and have space for up to 85 passengers. The route is fully autonomous, with constant monitoring by cameras and sensors allowing it to operate without staff on board.
The first car made its journey up the cableway on the evening of Friday 13 December at an official opening ceremony. It began welcoming regular passengers on Saturday 14 December.
Visit a mountaintop made famous by James Bond
The new cable car is part of the ‘Schilthornbahn 20XX’ project which involves building a new route made up of three sections. It will eventually run from Stechelberg and Mürren via Birg up to the Schilthorn, cutting the current journey time from 32 minutes to around 18 minutes.
The Swiss mountain’s ‘Piz Gloria’ restaurant was made famous by the 1969 James Bond film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service.
This revolving restaurant is located at the peak of the Schilthorn and has 360-degree views of more than 200 other mountain peaks. If visibility is good, you can even see Montblanc.
Designed by Bernese architect Konrad Wolf, it claims to be the world’s first revolving restaurant.
Its name comes from Ian Fleming’s 1963 novel of the same name in which it is the mountain-top hideout of the villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld. The production team for the movie found the restaurant partially complete and contributed to finishing its construction in return for exclusive use for filming the 1969 movie.
A new cableway between Mürren and Birg also opened at the same time as the world’s steepest cable car. The final stretch from Birg to the Schilthorn is expected to open in March 2025 with the finalisation of the entire project in spring/summer 2026. This top section has been closed since mid-October because of the project.
Travel
Paris and Berlin linked: High-speed train service launches with fares from €59
The route is the first directly linking the two capitals’ city centres.
Paris and Berlin are about to get a little closer.
A year after its nighttime counterpart hit the rails, the highly anticipated daytime high-speed train linking Paris and Berlin is ready to launch on 16 December, Germany’s Deutsche Bahn has confirmed.
The new route promises faster, direct and daily journeys between the two bustling capital cities, and at a competitive price.
How long will the new Paris-Berlin train take?
Currently, travelling during the day between Paris and Berlin involves a connection and usually takes between nine and 10.5 hours.
The ÖBB Nightjet overnight train between the two capitals, meanwhile, takes around 13 hours and 15 minutes and only departs three times a week – on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
This overnight service also was suspended just eight months after it launched due to major works on the rail network. It resumed service in early November, about three months after it was paused.
The new direct train service will run daily and take around eight hours, departing Paris Gare de l’Est at 9.55am and arriving at Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 6.03pm.
In the other direction, the train will depart at 11.54am and arrive at 7.55pm.
According to the rail operators, it is the first to link the two capitals “from city centre to city centre”.
The inaugural journey will set off from Berlin Hauptbahnhof at 12.02pm on 16 December, with dignitaries including François Delattre, the French ambassador to Germany, and Kai Wegner, the governing mayor of Berlin, in attendance.
How much will the new Paris-Berlin train cost, and where will it stop?
The new high-speed ICE train sets off just in time for Christmas. It will stop in Strasbourg, Karlsruhe and Frankfurt along the way.
Tickets are on sale now, starting at €59 one way.
“This creation of a connection contributes to a common objective of our two countries: to promote carbon-free mobility,” managing director of TGV-Intercités Alain Krakovitch tweeted after announcing the new service in September.
“Compared to the plane, the [train] journey between Berlin and Paris generates only one hundredth of the CO2 emissions,” he added.
Deutsche Bahn plans to make trains more reliable
Germany’s reputation for punctuality has, in recent years, not extended to its trains. In both 2022 and 2023, over a third of long-distance trains were delayed, DB figures show.
Short-term construction works, rail repairs, staff strikes and extreme weather were the main reasons behind the delays.
The operator hopes to improve the situation in the coming year, in part by adding more long-distance services with fewer stops.
Since October, it has also allowed passengers to pre-book 12 months ahead, up from the current six.
As infrastructure improvements continue, DB hopes that delays will gradually ease over the next two years.
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