Eco Everest Expedition

Eco Everest Expedition is an annual expedition drill, started in 2008, with the sole aim of clearing and removing accumulated debris on Mount Everest.

Background

Mount Everest, the highest mountain on earth, has attracted thousands of mountaineers in the last two centuries and was first successfully climbed in 1953 by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay. Hundreds of expeditions left garbage and mountaineering equipment by the ascent lines. Some items at high altitude remained there for decades and gradually piled up. Garbage became a threat to the environment and future expeditions.[1]

Cleaning the debris

As of 2012, more than 13,500 kilograms (29,800 lb) of debris and waste materials and more than 450 kilograms of human waste (and the remains of five dead climbers) left on the mountain had been brought down by Eco Everest.[2]

2008 expedition

Eco Everest Expedition began removing debris in 2008.[1] Partnering with the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development and United Nations Environment Programme and support by Nepal, the expedition created awareness about global warming and importance of sustainable mountaineering.[3] Dawa Stevan Sherpa, son of well known mountaineer Ang Thsering Sherpa led the first expedition and reached the summit on May 26, 2008.[3]

gollark: "Real" antimemes don't do this because you know about their existence/can perceive them, but just don't want to spread them for whatever reason.
gollark: They would be made anomalously inclined to ignore chains of logic which might lead to "thus antimeme".
gollark: It's not exactly very internally consistent, but humans are *masters* of rationalization.
gollark: It happens still, but they don't know why, and are unable to infer the presence of the antimeme from it.
gollark: This is not really right though. Instead of simulating some ridiculously complex alternate universe without the thing, the human could just be anomalously made to not infer anything from the weirdness caused by the antimeme/not perceive its changes.

See also

References

  1. Walsh, Bryan (29 May 2013). "60 Years After Man First Climbed Everest, the Mountain Is a Mess". TIME Science & Space. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  2. "Eco Everest 2012". Healthy Parks Healthy people. Archived from the original on 30 May 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  3. Sherpa, Ang Thsering. "Eco Everest Expedition 2008". Asian Trekking Pvt. Ltd. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
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