Loading prices...

Register/Sign in
ScrapMonster
Sell Your Junk CarGet an instant quote for your car on ScrapMonster.com
Waste & Recycling June 17, 2019 05:30:39 AM

Crew Hauls 24,200 Pounds of Trash from Mount Everest

Waste Advantage
ScrapMonster Author
The Nepalese government has yet to say whether it plans to restrict the number of climbing permits each year.

Crew Hauls 24,200 Pounds of Trash from Mount Everest

SEATTLE (Waste 360): The government of Nepal recently announced that 24,200 pounds of trash was hauled off Mount Everest during a 45-day cleanup expedition. Recovered items included empty oxygen cylinders, plastic bottles, cans, food wrappings, fecal matter and four human bodies, The Washington Postreports.

The trash buildup is only part of the problem the world’s most famous peak has experienced recently. Various news reports have noted that this year has been Everest’s deadliest climbing season on record since 2015—with 11 killed on the mountain in 2019 alone.

The Nepalese government has yet to say whether it plans to restrict the number of climbing permits each year. Reports also note that climbers bring in $300 million to Nepal, a relatively poor country.

The world’s most famous peak is showing its wear and tear. Since it was first successfully topped in 1953, Mount Everest has become a sought-after destination for international daredevil climbers. Each spring, hundreds of people flock to the slopes of the nearly 30,000-foot mountain.

The problem is what they leave behind — tons of garbage and human waste that have earned the natural wonder the distinction as the “world’s highest garbage dump.”

The issue was underscored on Wednesday, when the government of Nepal announced that 24,200 pounds of garbage were pulled off the mountain during a 45-day cleanup expedition, according to the Times of India. Bigyan Dev Pandey, a spokesman for the Nepal Army, told the paper that the tens of thousands of pounds of trash included “empty oxygen cylinders, plastic bottles, cans, batteries, food wrappings, fecal matter and kitchen waste.”

Courtesy: https://www.waste360.com

×

Quick Search

Advanced Search