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View Full Version : Mount Everest has become an ‘open toilet,’ staggering amount of human waste found on its slopes



Teh One Who Knocks
06-25-2019, 11:16 AM
FOX News Staff


https://i.imgur.com/SIkBWLSl.jpg

Mount Everest has a plumbing problem.

The current "biggest" threat to climbers on the world's tallest peak, the former head of the Nepal Mountaineering Association said, is the staggering amount of human excrement being left on its slopes -- with some estimates putting that number at more than 17,000 pounds for this season alone.

“The biggest problem and concern now on Everest is human waste," Ang Tshering told the Associated Press in an interview this week. "Hundreds of people are there for weeks who go to open toilets.”

It is impossible to know exactly how much litter is spread across Everest because it only becomes visible when the snow melts. But at Camp 2, two levels higher than Base Camp, sherpas who worked on the government’s cleanup drive this spring believe around 17,637 pounds of human excrement was left there during this year’s climbing season, the Associated Press reports.

Melting conditions at Camp 2 create an odor that is sickening to climbers, and the waste will eventually contaminate water sources below and become a health hazard, Tshering warns.

“During our expedition to Camp 2, eight of our 10 Sherpas got stomach illness from bad water at Camp 2,” said John All, a professor of environmental science at Western Washington University who visited Everest on a research expedition.

Ang Dorjee, who heads the independent Everest Pollution Control Committee, has demanded that the Nepal government institute some rules.

“The problem is there are no regulations on how to dispose of the human waste. Some climbers use biodegradable bags that have enzymes, which decompose human waste but most of them don’t,” he said.

Instead of using the makeshift toilets, many climbers dig a hole in the snow, letting the waste fall into small crevasses. However, rising temperatures have thinned the glacier, leaving fewer and smaller crevasses. The overflowing waste then spills downhill toward Base Camp and even communities below the mountain.

People living at the Base Camp use melted snow for drinking water -- and for them, the human excrement poses a health risk.

https://i.imgur.com/t1v01YG.png

Tshering and other mountaineers say the government should mandate the use of biodegradable bags for human waste. The bags are expensive and have to be imported from the United States.

Fox News’ Francesca Walton and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

Goofy
06-25-2019, 12:15 PM
Frozen jobbies..... lovely :lol:

Teh One Who Knocks
06-25-2019, 12:16 PM
Frozen jobbies..... lovely :lol:

Does that mean you want to volunteer to go help clean up? :-k

Goofy
06-25-2019, 12:22 PM
Does that mean you want to volunteer to go help clean up? :-k
Nah, no thanks :)

Teh One Who Knocks
06-25-2019, 12:23 PM
Nah, no thanks :)

Too late, I penciled you in for the Noon to 6 PM shift on Saturday :tup:

Goofy
06-25-2019, 12:41 PM
Too late, I penciled you in for the Noon to 6 PM shift on Saturday :tup:
Sorry im busy :)

Teh One Who Knocks
06-25-2019, 12:44 PM
Sorry im busy :)

Busy cleaning up shit :tup:

Goofy
06-25-2019, 01:10 PM
Bowling actually :)

Hal-9000
06-25-2019, 04:46 PM
“During our expedition to Camp 2, eight of our 10 Sherpas got stomach illness from bad water at Camp 2,”

When those guys get sick you know it's bad.

I saw this on the news. One idea which I strongly agree with is deposits on all equipment brought up there (they leave lots of it behind) and different ways to transport water and food.

The poopalanches are a whole different thing :lol:

lost in melb.
06-25-2019, 05:37 PM
What a shit hole

Godfather
06-26-2019, 06:44 AM
“The biggest problem and concern now on Everest is human waste," Ang Tshering told the Associated Press in an interview this week. "Hundreds of people are there for weeks who go to open toilets.”

I don't disagree with how disgusting this all is, but I wish this article would mention the human cost too.

I watched an eye opening documentary recently (I believe it's called Sherpa). There are a shit load of young kids missing hands and feet, or families missing their fathers and sons because they died or were maimed guiding tourists on Everest. The money offered to guide is too good to pass up on, but when they lose relatives or lose limbs to frostbite (quite common given they're stuck in the death zone helping unfit tourists not die all the damn time) and can't climb, they're fucked. I'm sure there's an argument like cheap labor anywhere in Asia that the opportunity is still far better than any other prospect in these communities but for the risk these young men are taking with absolutely no insurances, the human cost and exploitation deserves to be mentioned alongside the disgusting level of pollution.