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May 2, 2018

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30,000 porters clean ‘the world’s highest junkyard’ this year

Qomolangma, once recognized as the “world’s highest junkyard,” is set to become cleaner as 30,000 porters have been mobilized for waste collection and disposal from the mountain’s southern side.

The cleanup drive was launched in mid-March near Lukla Airport, one of the world’s most dangerous airport, yet a vital gateway to the world’s highest peak.

“Our major task is to keep Everest (Qomolangma), which is the pride of the world, clean. This campaign aims to transport 100 tons of non-burnable garbage from the Everest region to Kathmandu in 2018,” said Ang Dorje Sherpa, chairman of the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee.

SPCC, an environmental conservation organization, has made it mandatory since 2013 that every climber should carry down 8 kilograms of trash, but for trekkers there is no such regulation. Due to this, more than 100 tons of waste gets collected in the region annually.

According to Nepalese government statistics, nearly 50,000 domestic and foreign trekkers visit the Qomolangma region annually, while over 400 mountaineers attempt to scale the peak.

The collected waste mostly includes empty beer bottles and cans, oxygen bottles, torn tents and sleeping bags, food bins, discarded mountaineering and trekking equipment.

The trash was collected by different local groups in more than a dozen villages while the waste was transported down the mountain in sacks by porters and yak-hybrid animals known as zopkyos. The cleanup covered settlements from up to 5,000 meters near the base camp, to Lukla airport located at an altitude of 2,805 meters.

Having small waste disposable bins along the trail, burnable and biodegradable waste was disposed off at incinerators at different locations. And only the non-burnable and non-biodegradable waste was brought down to Lukla.

On the first day of the campaign, thousands of kilograms of waste was sent off to Kathmandu from Lukla via different planes belonging to Tara Airlines, a subsidiary of Yeti Airlines, one of the leading private airlines in Nepal.

The airlines has set an ambitious target of flying out 100 tons of waste from the region this year, as part of its commitment to the UN Sustainable Development Goals against climate change.

“We hope that this campaign will help the local people to maintain a pristine, natural and unspoiled environment so that more trekkers will come from everywhere, making the trekking industry here more sustainable,” said the company’s CEO Umesh Chandra Rai.

Valerie Julliand, UN resident coordinator in Nepal, said “there is a need to keep the area pristine and clean and therefore this effort is really laudable because it really puts at its center the service all humanity.”

On March 17, a small passenger airplane was retrofitted into a cargo carrier that transported the collected waste to Kathmandu.

After landing at the capital’s airport, the waste was handed over to a private recycling social enterprise “Blue Waste to Value” for the recycling and management process.




 

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