How much is too much for Mount Everest? Isn’t it time for Sagarmatha to rest

by TANKA DHAKAL

Mt. Everest base camp in the second week of May 2024. In recent years, the number of climbers has been increasing. In the spring climbing seasons, the base camp looks like a colorful settlement of the mountaineering community. IMAGE/Tanka Dhakal/IPS

When Kancha Sherpa, the only surviving member of the first successful Mt. Everest expedition, says it is time for Sagarmatha, as the world’s tallest mountain is known in Nepal, to rest, isn’t it time that the world listened?

“That’s Mt. Everest!” I overheard this from a trekking guide to his trekkers team. I stopped and asked him—which one! He was not our guide, but I approached. He pointed a finger and showed me Mt. Everest and I cried—I don’t know why. I was overwhelmed and humbled to finally witness the world’s tallest mountain—it was not from the base camp but from Thyangboche while returning.

Whenever I think about mountains, I immediately go to that time when I was filled with emotions and the numbers of people going there. The Khumbu region, which is home to some of the world’s highest mountains, including Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest), is seeing an influx of climbers and trekkers, especially in the spring season, and concern is growing.

Last May, I had the chance to visit and report from the region. One thing I noticed was the concern about the increasing number of climbers and trekkers. I was stunned by the number of people returning and going towards the base camp—this made me think: Is it sustainable for the region, which is already vulnerable to the impact of rising temperatures?

In recent years, the number of climbers and trekkers has been consistently high, and the influx has led to incidents of “traffic jams” on Everest. Every year, more than 450 climbers from around the world get permits from the Nepal government to climb Mt. Everest, and this number is constantly growing. More than 50,000 people trek to the base camp every year, which I believe is too much for an ecologically and geographically vulnerable area like Khumbu.

There I met Kancha Sherpa, 92, the only living member of the 1953 first successful Mt. Everest expedition team. He voiced his fears, saying the mountain needs “rest” and “respect.”

“For the government, Mt. Everest is only about money,” Sherpa said. “And for climbers these days, it is only about creating records.” In his home in Namche, Solukhumbu, Sherpa shared his frustration over increased and largely commercialized mountaineering activities.

For sherpas, the mountain is their goddess, their home. They worship her. I remember Kancha Sherpa compassionately saying, “We are grateful. But our goddess is tired from human waste; she needs rest for some time.”

During my entire reporting trek and after returning, Kancha Sherpa’s voice was constantly echoing in my mind–the mountain needs rest and respect.

Yes, tourism and mountaineering activities are not only a way of livelihood for communities in Khumbu but also a major source of revenue for the government of Nepal. It is creating opportunities-even though locals are mainly forced to be a guide or helping hands to trekkers and climbers’ exploration.

But at what cost, or is it sustainable? I don’t believe it is. Science has been telling us for a long time now that the impact of rising temperatures is higher in the mountains. Reports are saying the impact of climate change in the mountains of the Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) region, which hosts the Sagarmatha range too, is unprecedented and largely irreversible. It means that changes to the glaciers, snow, and permafrost driven by global warming are extremely worrisome and need urgent action.

But the overflow of people in the Everest region is acting as a catalyst to the already vulnerable region and making it more prone to forthcoming worst situations.

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