Off the wire
3.34 mln new jobs created in first quarter  • Seven in 10 Australians support minimum wage rise: poll  • 1st LD-Writethru: China's first cargo spacecraft Tianzhou-1 to be launched  • 1st LD-Writethru: China's retail sales up 10 pct in Q1  • China's energy intensity down 3.8 pct in Q1  • Former vice-ministerial level inspector under probe  • 1st LD: China's Q1 growth quickens  • Xiongan-themed stocks in mixed performance after resuming trading Monday  • Alcohol, tobacco consumption falls in 2016 in Russia  • 23 people injured in Japan bus crash  
You are here:   Home/ Editors' Choice

Spring attracts hundreds of climbers to Tibet's peaks

China Daily, April 14, 2017 Adjust font size:

Nepali mountaineer Min Bahadur Sherchan wants to regain his title as the oldest to scale Qomolangma.(Photo/China Daily)



More than 300 mountaineers from around the world will try to conquer some of the planet's highest peaks during this year's spring climbing season in the Tibet autonomous region.

Adventurers from 30 countries filed climb plans with the Tibet Mountaineering Association ahead of the season, which began Monday and runs for 60 days.

"The best time to climb is the last week of May, because conducive weather factors are forecast during this period," said Sonam, the association's secretary, who predicted that 100 people would reach summits this season.

Tibet is home to the world's highest mountain, Qomolangma-known as Mount Everest in the West-which stands at 8,848 meters. The surrounding range also includes Cho Oyu (8,201 meters) and Shishapangma (8,012 meters).

In addition to the mountaineers, the seasonal climbing activities will involve more than 100 guides, translators and trainers, according to the association. Of those filing plans to climb, more than one-third, 135, were from Nepal.

"So far, 22 climbers from various parts of China have registered to take part in climbs assisted by about 100 coaches, guides and support crews from domestic mountaineering associations and companies," Sonam said.

He said conditions at Qomolangma Base Camp have improved since it was connected to the regional power grid in 2014.

Previously, the camp was powered by generators, "but the supply was not stable", he said. "The climbers couldn't rest well with the big noise from the generators, and the diesel of the generators brought hidden dangers for the environment."

The spring season is also good news for Tibetan herdsmen, Sonam added, as their incomes will be boosted by working as porters or by renting out yaks to carry supplies up mountain passes.

The Nepali participants all entered from Tibet's Gyirong Port, and the climbers of other countries made their entry from Lhasa, the regional capital.

The climbers will set up tents at base camps and then will receive adaptive training before relocating to higher sites assisted by guides.

Last year, 696 climbers from 34 countries and regions, including 424 in the spring, visited Tibet to climb, according to Tibet Commercial News.

Surrounded by snowcapped mountains and glaciers, Tibet has many natural advantages for its mountaineering industry. It has five mountains higher than 8,000 meters, more than 70 mountains higher than 7,000 meters and at least 1,000 mountains higher than 6,000 meters.