Nepal earthquake: climbing firms call off Everest expeditions for second year

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/may/04/nepal-earthquake-climbing-firms-call-off-everest-season-for-second-year-running

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Mountaineering companies have called off their spring expeditions to Mount Everest in the wake of Nepal’s devastating earthquake.

It is means that there will be virtually no summits of the world’s highest mountain for the second year running after last year’s cancellations following the deaths of 16 Nepalese guides.

The 7.8-magnitude quake left a trail of death and destruction when it erupted around midday on 25 April, bringing down buildings in the capital Kathmandu and triggering an avalanche that ripped through Everest base camp, killing 18 people.

Climbing companies said they had cancelled their plans due to fear of aftershocks and destruction of the route to the summit.

“With ongoing aftershocks and tremors we can’t continue expeditions,” two-time Everest summiteer Dawa Steven Sherpa of Kathmandu-based Asian Trekkers said.

“And there is nothing in place for climbers anyway ... no ropes or ladders.... So there is no point in continuing this season,” he added.

US-based International Mountain Guides and Nepalese outfit Seven Summits expressed similar concerns, while market leader Himex also cancelled their expedition.

“All our members... are climbing down now. No more going up now, not until routes are clear and not until everything is in place for climbers,” said Himex’s Tamding Sherpa.

Related: A graphical guide to Nepal's earthquake

The decisions come less than a week after the Nepalese tourism department chief advised climbers against abandoning their expeditions, saying repairs were underway while playing concerns of further quakes and aftershocks.

The Sagarmatha pollution control committee, the agency authorised to set the route that climbers take up Mount Everest, has yet to decide whether it will pull the plug on climbing which means some independent climbers could still go ahead.

Some 800 climbers were on the mountain when the avalanche roared through base camp sparked by a massive earthquake that left more than 7,000 people dead.

The disaster was the worst to hit Everest and came just one year after another avalanche killed 16 Nepalese guides, sparking an unprecedented shutdown of the 8,848-metre (29,029-foot) high mountain.