Mount Everest peeks through the clouds in this Sept. 27, 2015, photo, taken from Everest Base Camp in Nepal. (Photo: Tashi Sherpa, AP) |
Not even Mount Everest appears immune to
global warming. And a new concern has emerged as a result of glacial
melting: Exposed bodies.
Melting ice and snow on Everest caused by higher temperatures is revealing the bodies of dead climbers, reports CNN.
Ang
Tshering Sherpa, the former president of the Nepal Mountaineering
Association, tells CNN climbers are finding the bodies as a result of
climate change, as "snow and glaciers are fast-melting."
Bodies are being removed from the Chinese side of Everest as the spring climbing season is about to begin, reports BBC.
The Expedition Operators Association of Nepal tells BBC dealing with
removing the dead bodies has been difficult because of a law requiring
the involvement of government agencies.
CNN reports more than 200 people have died on Everest's peak since 1922.
"This
issue needs to be prioritized by both the government and the
mountaineering industry," Dambar Parajuli, president of EOAN, told BBC.
Removing the bodies is also an expensive process. According to a 2016 report from The Washington Post, it can cost between $30,000 to $70,000 to retrieve a body from the mountain.
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