Arctic Winter Games slated for Russia in 2026 - Action News
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Arctic Winter Games slated for Russia in 2026

The Arctic Winter Games International Committee announced that the Yamal-Nenets contingent, in northwestern Siberia, is slated to host the games in 2026.

The Northern Russian region has been a participant in the Arctic Winter Games, but has never hosted

Cross country ski trials for the 2020 Arctic Winter Games occurred December 15, 2019 on Mt McIntyre in Whitehorse. The event was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2026 games are set to be in Russia, its international committee said Friday. (Stephen Anderson-Lindsay)

The Arctic Winter Games is going to Russia.

The games' international committee announced in a news release Friday that the Yamal-Nenets contingent is slated to host the games in 2026.Yamal-Nenets is in northwestern Siberia, central Russia, with a significant Indigenous population.

The Northern Russian region has been participating in the Arctic Winter Games an event for young northernathletes since 2004, but has never hosted.

The move could also open up the games to other participants in Europe as Yamal's governor has welcomed Iceland to a Yamal games. The final bid package is pending receipt and approval from Yamal-Nenets Department for International and External Economic Relations.

The games were slated for Whitehorse this year, butwere cancelled due to the COVID-19pandemic. Wood Buffalo, Alta., will host in 2022.

The N.W.T. was a hostin 2018 andhas hostedthe games on six other occasions.

The games will be held in Alaska in 2024, in a city yet to be determined.

"We are extremely pleased to be heading back to Alaska for the 2024 games and also enthusiastic about the prospect of adding Yamal-Nenets to the hosting rotation thereby providing new and exciting sport and cultural opportunities for the Arctic Winter Games participants" said John Rodda, vice president of the international committee, in a statement.

Team Yukon met up for a celebration in Whitehorse on March 15, after the games were cancelled due to COVID-19. (Claudiane Samson/Radio-Canada)

The international committee says it has also committed to looking into new potential host sites within its permanent member jurisdictions. It is also looking to establish a list of hosting standards that are "considered flexible to accommodate limitations in small host communities."

The Arctic Winter Games is the largest and most significant multi-sport cultural event in the circumpolar North, the release says.

The games are a combination of athletic competition along with cultural and social exchanges in the host community and among participants.

The permanent members of the Arctic Winter Gamesinclude Alaska, Alberta North, Greenland, Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Yukon, while guest members are from Nunavik Quebec, Yamal and Sapmi.