Nepal imposed a $4,000 bail on tourists to clean Everest. Now you have more garbage and a problem

If we talk about remote, isolated and inaccessible regions, few places reach the level of Everest. The highest mountain of the planet (at least if we take sea level as a reference) is not within everyone’s reach. Crowning it requires years of preparation, acclimatization and in-depth knowledge of mountaineering, in addition to spending a few tens of thousands of dollars in tickets, equipment, fees and Sherpas. Despite that, despite all its rigors, Everest has become a monster touristified full of tons and tons of garbage. In Nepal they just checked that this problem, that of the accumulation of waste in the mountains, cannot be solved even with the threat of paying thousands of dollars. Hence, the Government is already considering tougher measures. What has happened? That Nepal has realized that the threat of sanctions is not enough to prevent Everest from becoming a gigantic landfill frozen. More than a decade ago, its authorities adopted a measure with which they intended to clean the mountain: each climber who wanted to ascend to the roof of the world must first deposit $4,000, a kind of deposit that would only be recovered if he returned from his expedition with eight kilos of waste. The objective was clear: for the mountaineers to collect their garbage. If they did, they got their $4,000 back. If not, they lost the deposit. The idea looked good on paper, but it has turned out to be a fiasco. Over the past few years, mountaineers have returned from their climbs with backpacks full of debris to unlock their bails, but that hasn’t improved Everest. On the contrary. Why’s that? Very simple. Because (paraphrasing the Spanish proverb) ‘the law is made, the trap is made’. Tourists who have set out to conquer Everest have spent the last few years returning with rubbish to claim a refund of their money, but what at first sounds so positive has actually meant a problem for the mountains. The reason? The origin of these wastes. Climbers collect waste, true, but in lower altitude camps. Things change if we talk about the highest bases, where loading and eliminating waste is more difficult, expensive and even dangerous. Hence, the waste problem continues to be worrying and has even worsened in the most sensitive areas: the camps located closer to the summit. “From the highest bases people tend to return only with oxygen bottles,” explains to the BBC Tshering Sherpa, executive director of the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee. “Other items like tents, cans and boxes of packaged food and beverages are left there, mostly abandoned. That’s why we see so much trash piling up.” What has been the result? A fiasco. The Sherpas themselves recognize that the pollution problem has worsened in the camps closest to the summit. After all… Why descend loaded with garbage from the top of the mountain if 8 kg can then be collected in the lower camps? As if that were not enough, managing the $4,000 deposits has resulted in more paperwork for Nepalese officials. Although the problem of dirt has not been solved, the majority of mountaineers recover their deposits, which translates into an “administrative burden” for the nation. Does it work that badly? In the country there are those who speak directly of a “defective norm” that fails in several key points. The main one, surveillance. “From the checkpoint above the Khumbu Icefall there is no supervision over what the climbers do,” comments Sherpa. Hence, it is not a problem for tourists to leave their garbage at the top of the mountain and then cover the quota with waste from lower camps. There is also another important handicap. The rule requires climbers to return with 8 kg of waste, but there are studies that warn that a climber produces much more waste during his stay on the mountain, at least if the weeks of acclimatization are taken into account. To be precise, we are talking about 12 kg. Is the problem that serious? Yes. The figures speak for themselves. Estimates may vary from one study to another, but they generally show that after years of tourism, Everest has become a large landfill in which dozens of tons of waste accumulate. And that includes everything from packaging, store remains, ropes… and even kilos and kilos of feces. It is not at all surprising if you take into account the great popularity that the mountain has been gaining over the last few decades. Although the expeditions are not affordable for everyone (some estimate that they cost between 40,000 and 60,000 dollars) every year hundreds of climbers land on Everest. The Telepragh esteem that around 600 mountaineers try to climb the mountain every year, which represents a huge flow of climbers who arrive accompanied by equipment and Sherpas. There are many, but the figure falls short when compared to the activity that was recorded in the area before the pandemic. Statista calculates For example, in 2023, 656 successful promotions were recorded, a figure that exceeded 800 before the health crisis. And now what? After assuming that their previous bailout plan “did not show tangible results,” the Nepalese authorities want to toughen their conditions to tackle the pollution problem. They have a new plan on the table that includes a cleaning fee that It would be around $4,000.although with an important nuance: in this case would not be refundable. The idea is that this flow of thousands of dollars will serve to finance the conservation of the mountain. “With the new plan we will deploy qualified rangers paid for by the cleaning fee collected from climbers,” comments Himal Gautamfrom the Department of Tourism. If the measure goes ahead, it will join others that in recent years have sought to improve the preservation of Everest, such as the increase in rates administrative or even the norm which since 2024 requires mountaineers to carry bags to collect their excrement. Images | Akunamatata (Flickr), Mari Partyka (Unsplash) In Xataka | When a storm hit Everest, a … Read more

To decongest Everest, Nepal allows you to access another 97 free peaks. The problem is that nobody wants to upload them

Although some contender seeks to remove the crownEverest remains the mountaineer Grand Prix. Hundreds of people die every year During the journey to the top and arriving, it ensures personal glory and a certificate. So important is that There are those who lie about their feat. It is evident that Everest is a tourism monsterand that has led Nepal to take a radical solution: let out other peaks of the Himalayas free of charge. It won’t be so easy. Pressure. Getting to the top of Everest is not simple. Sample of difficulty are the bodies that accumulate In its corners, but mountaineering, and specifically Activity at Everestremains one of the heavyweights of the Nepali economy. It is estimated that, in 2024, of the 5.9 million dollars that the country obtained directly from the climbing permits to its peaks, more than 75% were thanks to Everest. And we would have to add expenses such as stays, food and other activities related to that activity. The problem is that it is saturatedwhich led the government to touch prices. The rates to undertake the adventure will rise 36%, from $ 11,000 to 15,000 to upload the mountain in the busiest months. And, from September to November and from December to February, when the influx is lower, the rates will be placed at $ 7,500 and $ 3,750, starting from September 1 of this year. The Himalayas opens from par. Money is not the only thing that will need those who want to crown the top: there is also debate about the need to have made a mountain of more than 7,000 meters from the country itself before climbing Everest. And there the measure that adopted from Katmandú a few weeks ago comes into play. On July 17, and during the next two climbing seasons, Nepal opened For the doors of almost a hundred mountains. Specifically97 located in the westernmost regions of the country. 77 Cumbres are in the province of Karnali and the remaining 20 in Sudurpaschim, and are not negligible picos because, after all, Nepal has eight of the ten highest mountains in the world: Saipal – 7,030 meters. API West – 7,076 meters. API – 7,132 meters Tourists, welcome (please). If we look at the figures, this measure makes all the meaning of the world for two reasons. The first and most obvious, decongesting Everest, being a huge logistics challenge to have to manage that number of visitors. The second, distribute a little tourism that, currently, are concentrated both in Everest and other central summits. The Government wants to arouse interest in little visited tops or even virgins. And if before we talked about more than 75% of the money that the climbing permits leave in Nepal come from activities at Everest, we must specify something more: in 2024 421 permits were issued to climb Everest, but there were only 68 mountaineers that They tried Go up at 97 summits that will now be free. Challenges beyond the mountain. Giving that incentive for the adventurers to explore other areas of the country, they will not only decongest their great peak, but also give an oxygen ball to more remote areas, but with equally impressive peaks. Now, the great challenge will be to convince climbers to go to those areas. Karnali and Sudurpaschim are precisely the poorest and least developed regions of Nepal. The services are limited, the scarce infrastructure and are not the most prepared areas to manage tourists efficiently, something that also moves those possible visitors away. And the big problem is that, as they point out in BBCit is not clear how local communities would face the avalanche of climbers or, even, if the authorities have plans to improve infrastructure or connection with these more remote areas. Because climbing those 7,000 -meter peaks can be free now, but if arriving is an adventure even greater than crowning the top, the climbers will continue to go to the area that is prepared: that of Everest. Image | Sebastian Pena Lambarri In Xataka | During confinement we abandon mass mountaineering. It’s time to try to get back

In ‘The Last of Us’ cordyceps is a zombie fungus. In Nepal it is a sexual fungus so exclusive that people die to achieve it

In 2006, The BBC Earth serieswith David Attenborough narrating the chilling sequence, he first revealed to the world of What was capable of a parasite fungus in the body of a creature. We had never been participants in something like that, and the guest that carried the disoriented ant of the colony was going to turn the scene into television history. Years later, the clip with the spores of the parasite fungus cordyceps served as inspiration for the game ‘The Last of Us’, and the subsequent series. In the real world, Cordyceps is also dangerous. A fungus wrapped in myth. The story I told Bloomberg in a report. In the extreme heights of the Himalayas, The cordyceps sinensisknown as “Yartsa Gunbu” in Tibetan or “Caterpillar Fungus”, has been used for centuries in traditional Asian medicine. Its peculiar origin, growing like a parasite inside the ghost moth larvaeand his reputation as a powerful aphrodisiac, they have made it one of the most coveted natural products in the world, reaching exorbitant prices that can reach up to $ 136,000 per pound in Chinese markets. Popularly known as the “Viagra del Himalaya”, the fungus has generated a whole multimillionary industry behind With a growing global demand, especially in China, South Korea and Japan, where it is a symbol of status and prestige. Booming market of falsifications. While in the West the cordyceps can be found in cheap supplements in stores like Amazon, most of these products do not contain the real fungus, but synthetic versions or similar species without the alleged desired effects. In fact, Stanford University research estimates that The global cordyceps industry moves up to 11 billion dollars annuallyalthough much of this trade is based on imitations. According to German mycologist Daniel Winklerwho has spent two decades studying the fungus in the Tibet, authentic products are rare and are sold almost exclusively in Asia at prohibitive prices. Nepal: an economy around the fungus. In Katmandú markets, each store seems to sell the precious fungus, with merchants such as KC Bastola, who offers different levels of quality with prices ranging between $ 10 per piece and $ 4,000 per poundstill relatively low values ​​compared to the final price after the passage of intermediaries. As we said, Here the business is dominated by Chinese buyers, Many of them identifiable for their luxury clothing, which acquire large amounts of cordyceps to resell them in their country of origin, where the government imposes strict regulations on their harvest and trade. We talk about a trade that has generated an economic boom in rural communities of Nepal and Tibet, where Collectors like Tek Bhadur Budha manage to earn up to $ 15,000 a yearenough money to keep their families and send their children to study in the capital. The danger: more deaths than in Everest. Cordyceps sinensis collection It is an extremely dangerous job. The reason? It is carried out in rugged land, more than 4,500 meters altitude, where collectors spend whole days looking for tiny fungi, often on knees and with temperatures below zero. Every spring, entire villages leave their homes and set up improvised camps on the mountaineven closing schools for children and adolescents to participate in the collection. A fact to put it in context: in recent years, more people have died hunting Yartsa than climbing Mount Everest, victims of extreme cold, avalanches, sudden floods and violent clashes between collectors. Everything is worth. For its part, the Dalai Lama has described the cordyceps industry as a crisis for Buddhist culture because its high value has caused violence, exploitation and corruption in the region. Criminal gangs have murdered collectors and have appropriated harvest territorieswhile the use of child labor is an extended practice, with minors dedicated to looking for fungi in extreme conditions. In addition, the lack of regulation allows intermediaries to buy the fungus at very low prices, leaving collectors at a disadvantage against a market dominated by large merchants. Is it really an aphrodisiac? Despite their reputation as sexual stimulating, scientific studies They have found little conclusive evidence that cordyceps has a direct impact on libido. An eight -week study only identified that Consumers felt more energy, but without significant improvements in sexual desire. It happens that the placebo effect and cultural beliefs play a key role in their consumption. According to anthropologist Tawni Tidwellalthough the fungus does not improve its own sexual desire, You have seen notable results in peoplewith men reporting stronger and more lasting erections, and women affirming an increase in their sensitivity. On the other sidewalk, Tashi Tsering doctor, defender of cordyceps, argues that The fungus harmonizes the five cosmic elements (Earth, fire, water, air and space) and that its effectiveness lies in an energy balance rather than in a direct biochemical action. That said, its consumption is not exempt from side effects. In fact, the author of the Bloomberg report said that after drinking a cup of yartsa tea experienced an intense gastrointestinal reaction. The ecological impact of the fungus. It is another cordyceps problems. The growing fungus market has generated an environmental crisis in the Himalayas. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has cataloged it as a species vulnerable to extinctiongiven that Demand has led to overexploitation which exceeds the natural capacity of regeneration of the ecosystem. More than 130 tons of cordyceps per year are collectedcausing soil erosion, abnormalities in snow cycles and changes in ecological balance. In fact, experts warn that if the situation continues, the wild populations of the fungus could disappear in a few decades. Illegal regulation and traffic. Unlike Nepal, where cordyceps collection follows a more open model, China strictly regulates its harvest and sale. This results in Many Chinese merchants cross the border illegally to acquire large quantities of the fungus in Nepal and then traffic it back to China inside suitcases or vehicles. According to Rajendra BajagainMember of the Parliament of Nepal, this activity is out of control, with foreign buyers promoting a black market … Read more

Nepal has decided to get serious about the touristification of the Himalayas

Everest is an extreme place, dangerousdifficult to access, roof of the world and one of its most unknown points. But of course It is not an inhospitable place.. Its magnetism is so powerful that every year hundreds and hundreds of mountaineers, plus their Sherpas, put their backpacks on their backs to climb its 8,849 meters. It is estimated that in 2018, before the pandemic, they reached the summit more than 800 climbers. And the forecasts for this year’s spring season are generous, with about 700 summits from Nepal and Tibet. With these data, the Nepalese authorities have made a decision: increase the rates They charge almost 40%. A demanding goal… and expensive. Summiting Everest is not easy. Not cheap either. Especially from September onwards, when Nepal expects skyrocket rates which charges climbers in exchange for the permits necessary to climb the highest mountain on the planet. Prices had not been touched for almost a decade, so in Kathmandu they have decided to go all out, increasing their rates about 36%. In hard cash that translates into thousands of extra dollars for those hoping to summit Everest. How much will they cost now? Starting in September, those who want a Nepalese permit to climb the mountain will have to pay $15,0004,000 more than now. This is during the most popular climbing season, April to May, and on the standard route of the southeast ridge, the South Col. From September to November and from December to February, less crowded months, rates will also increase by 36% to reach, respectively, 7,500 and 3,750 dollars. An expected rise. The update of rates (the first “in a long time”, defend from the Nepal Tourism Department), will make the climb to Everest even more expensive; but it will probably have caught few climbers by surprise. “We expected this increase in rates,” recognizes Guardian Lukas Furtenbach, from the Austrian expedition company Furtenbach Adventures. In his opinion, this is an “understandable” decision by the Nepalese Government and he trusts that the extra dollars that enter its coffers starting in September will be used on the mountain itself, protecting its ecosystem and reinforcing security. Key to the region. If we talk about mountains, Nepal is not just any country: it is home to eight of the 14 famous ‘peaks 8,000’ on the planet, making it a coveted destination for mountaineers. And that in turn generates an interesting source of income for its population. The BBC estimates that mountaineering and hiking more than 4% of the country’s economy and throughout recent years there have been several experts who have tried to quantify exactly how much mountain tourism contributes to the region. “Mountain tourism is an important source of income for the inhabitants of the Himalayas, since agriculture is limited in these places due to harsh climatic conditions and poor crops,” points out Sayas D. Joshi at Nepal Economic Forum. According to the data it managed in 2022, the activity leaves the villagers between 150 and 250 million Nepalese rupees each year in salaries and services, in addition to the activity it generates for agencies and operators. A valuable source of income. “According to data from the Nepal Mountaineering Association, seasonal employment in all categories of supporting labor ranges between 40,000 and 50,000 people. Climbing is a crucial business that brings much-needed income to the rural economy,” duck. “The 2021 spring season saw the highest number of Everest expedition teams since COVID-19, with more than 400 climbing permits issued. Mountaineering licenses have generated about 470 million Nepalese rupees in revenue for the Government”. For reference, that sum is equivalent to $3.4 million. The other bill. The influx of mountaineers aiming for the summit does not only translate into rupees, employment and fees. For Everest it means something equally or even more palpable: garbage and excrement, tons of waste which have even led the authorities to demand that mountaineers collect their own feces in biodegradable bags. The saturation of the mountain, with groups in which hundreds of people gather, also generates debate for years. Hundreds of permits. Reuters points out that each year some 300 permits to climb Everest, but the truth is that the total influx of mountaineers comfortably exceeds that figure. In 2019 it is estimated that they reached the summit 807 mountaineers and there are estimates that suggest that this spring season could be close to a similar number of summits, including those on both the Tibet and Nepal sides. Proof that the limits and sustainability of the mountain generate debate in Nepal is that not even a year ago, in April 2024, its Supreme Court demanded that the Government set limits on the issuance of permits to ascend Everest. The BBC remembers However, the order did not detail a maximum number. When money doesn’t matter. Nepalese fees are only a part (and not a very high one) of what it costs a mountaineer to climb Everest if all his expenses are taken into account. There are estimates that speak of $45,000others place the normal fork between 40,000 and 60,000they bring it closer to 70,000or even extend the total to the 200,000dollars. The truth is that money is not a problem for everyone. Financial Times spoke recently of a special seven-day package to ascend Everest. Its cost: 150,000. Why so few days and such a large sum? Partly due to a special pre-acclimatization treatment. Images | Mário Simoes (Flickr) and Munu Nepal (Flickr) In Xataka | Everest is growing faster than we thought because one river stole water from another 90,000 years ago

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