Davide Cerato will play a major role in skiing and snowboarding events at the upcoming Olympics, but he won't be competing.
The Italian snowmaking expert is responsible for perfecting several of the courses that will feature in the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Games, and he takes his job seriously.
''It's the most important race of their life,'' Cerato said. ''Our duty is to give them the best, to deliver the best courses where they can perform their best after training so hard.''
Cerato oversees operations at venues where new snowmaking systems were installed, including in Bormio for Alpine ski racing and ski mountaineering, and in Livigno for freestyle skiing and snowboarding events. He has been working with the International Ski and Snowboard Federation and the International Olympic Committee since the 2014 Sochi Olympics.
These days, manufactured snow — ''technical snow'' as Cerato calls it — is a way of life in ski racing, so much so that Olympic athletes don't think twice about competing on it. Above all else, they want a course that will hold up over multiple training runs and the races themselves without becoming too mushy or rutted.
Mother Nature can't always provide for that, and with climate change affecting winter sports in particular, snowmaking has become essential.
New reservoirs and snow guns
The organizing committee estimates the Games will need roughly 946 million liters (250 million gallons) of water, the equivalent of nearly 380 Olympic swimming pools, for snowmaking. Cerato oversaw the work to carve out new high-elevation water reservoirs to store it.