Thought of sharing this, Do Read :ROFL

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Posted: 9 years ago

Mountain of human poo plagues Everest

AP | Mar 4, 2015, 05.51 AM IST
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KATHMANDU: Human waste left by climbers on Mount Everest has become a problem that is causing pollution and threatening to spread disease on the world's highest peak, the chief of Nepal's mountaineering association said on Tuesday. 

The more than 700 climbers and guides who spend nearly two months on Everest's slopes each climbing season leave large amounts of feces and urine, and the issue has not been addressed, Ang Tshering told reporters. He said Nepal's government needs to get the climbers to dispose of the waste properly so the mountain remains pristine. 

Hundreds of foreign climbers attempt to scale Everest during Nepal's mountaineering season, which began this week and runs through May. Last year's season was canceled after 16 local guides were killed in an avalanche in April. 
Climbers spend weeks acclimatizing around the four camps set up between the base camp at 5,300m and the 8,850m high summit. The camps have tents and supplies but no toilets.

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*Dev.* thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
well, toilet is very necessary and it should be there somehow. These days biodigestable toilets are made and may be they should use this technique or any other way, but they should. Otherwise, of course its polluting the environment there. 
And LOL at the title!
BinKuchKahe. thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago

You know its funny I was just thinking about this a day back.. that the writers never really mentioned how the climbers went about their daily routine like going to the toilet, brushing their teeth etc in EVEREST & you posted this article! What timing..haha.

On a serious note, climbers should be more responsible & should not pollute the environment like that. Climbing's definitely risky & tough but still basic hygiene should be kept in mind for themselves & as well as future climbers.

Off-topic; We should create a thread for talking about Mount Everest. Articles like this & general information can be shared for everyone to gain knowledge & discuss. 
Edited by prc_fan1 - 9 years ago
*Dev.* thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago

Originally posted by: prc_fan1


You know its funny I was just thinking about this a day back.. that the writers never really mentioned how the climbers went about their daily routine like going to the toilet, brushing their teeth etc in EVEREST & you posted this article! What timing..haha.

On a serious note, climbers should be more responsible & should not pollute the environment like that. Climbing's definitely risky & tough but still basic hygiene should be kept in mind for themselves & as well as future climbers.

Off-topic; We should create a thread for talking about Mount Everest. Articles like this & general information can be shared for everyone to gain knowledge & discuss. 


haha! you won't believe but I used to wonder about this too and that too most of the time as when they were so real hence they should have at least included a scene of this. Its not just climbers but everyone's responsibility there to keep place clean.
Posted: 9 years ago
awesome post  they  use special type called nepal laterine search on wiki u all get that name that most of climber  take sherpas
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Posted: 9 years ago
Dev  , @prc-fan- I laways thought about this throughout the series, that how did they go abt doing the daily routine..😆
this is actually a serious problem..

i think these expeditions cost a lot, and they cant afford proper toilets in tents.or even if they have, there is no way to drainage system to dispose them off...i read somewhere, that some of the climbers carry plastic drums and other things, but where do they dispose it off?? it is definitely dirty and unheigenic...🤢


I Have found this:       http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2011/10/14/3339773.htm

News in Science

Calls for toilets on Mount Everest

Friday, 14 October 2011
AFP

Rubbish collected at Everest base camp

In the past three years, environmentalists have collected more than 13 tonnes of garbage, 400 kilograms of human waste and four bodies (Source: Laurence Tan/Reuters)

Related Stories

An environmental group is asking the Nepal government to consider installing portable toilets on Mount Everest for climbers caught short at the roof of the world.

Eco Himal says the thousands of trekkers who set off from the South Base Camp in Nepal each year would do a better job of keeping the place clean if they and their porters had somewhere civilised to go when nature called.

"Human waste is a problem," says the group's director, Phinjo Sherpa. "I am merely suggesting that if we have public toilets they can be used."

Many groups bring expedition toilet cans, but Phinjo Sherpa says porters were often left with little choice but the nearest snowdrift.

Environmental activists say Everest is littered with the detritus of past expeditions, including human waste and mountaineers' corpses, which can take decades to decompose because of the extreme cold.

Phinjo Sherpa says installing the toilets would be discussed as part of a wider waste management plan being prepared by the government that would encompass popular peaks throughout the Everest region.

"If there could be two or three toilets that would be good but this is just at the planning phase. We will have to decide what is a good idea and what isn't," he says.

However, the idea has been rejected by some of Eco Himal's partners within the Nepal-based climbing community.

"The ice moves around a lot during the year. If you built toilets at the base camp, the ice would shift and the structures would fall down," says Wangchhu Sherpa, president of the Everest Summiteers Association.

World's highest dumpster

Climbers spend tens of thousands of dollars trying to reach the 8848-metre summit of Everest, but campaigners say few pay much attention to the rubbish they leave behind.

There is no official figure on how much trash has been left on the mountain, but the debris of 50 years of climbing has given Everest the name of the world's highest dumpster.

The privately-funded Eco Everest Expedition, a Nepal-based coalition of environmentalists campaigning to keep the mountain clean, has collected more than 13 tonnes of garbage, 400 kilograms of human waste and four bodies since 2008.

Government officials say Everest trekkers are expected to bring down all their rubbish themselves.

Expeditions currently have to fork out a US$4000-dollar deposit, which is refundable once they show they have brought back everything they took onto the mountain. But the rules are impossible to enforce, say campaigners.

Wangchhu Sherpa says at least 10 tonnes of rubbish remained on the mountain. He is calling for the government to blacklist tour groups who cannot account for all their equipment and belongings when they return from Everest.

Nepal's Sherpa people, who are Buddhists and believed to be of Tibetan origin, make up most of the population in the Everest region and have long revered the world's highest peak as sacred.

Almost 4000 people have attempted to climb Mount Everest since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first people to conquer the world's highest peak in 1953.



-Raj- thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
It's a sad and bitter truth. .. A serious issue that calls for immediate action. .