The harrowing survival story of a Nepali guide stranded for days on Everest has reignited a bitter debate over safety standards on the world’s highest peak. UK mountaineering organisations are now demanding urgent reforms to protect workers and clients alike, as the industry faces mounting pressure to prioritise lives over profits.
Kami Sherpa, 34, was left for dead above 8,000 metres on the mountain’s notorious death zone after a climbing expedition abandoned him following a sudden collapse from altitude sickness. Rescuers found him unconscious and suffering from severe frostbite. His survival, against all odds, has laid bare the precarious conditions faced by the thousands of guides, porters and cooks who make the lucrative Everest trekking industry possible.
“This is not an isolated incident. It is a systematic failure,” said Rachel Clarke, chair of the UK-based Mountaineering Ethics Association. “We are seeing a race to the bottom where cost-cutting and overcrowding are putting workers at unacceptable risk. The industry is fuelled by a relentless demand for cheaper expeditions, and local guides are bearing the brunt.”
The call for reform comes as global attention focuses on the commercialisation of Everest. Expeditions have boomed in the past decade, with more than 600 climbers reaching the summit in 2023 alone. But the surge has brought deadly consequences. Five climbers died on the mountain last season, and critics argue that inexperienced clients and under-resourced teams are creating a deadly mix.
“These are not just statistics. These are people with families, who every day carry heavy loads and put their bodies on the line for a fraction of what foreign guides earn,” said Dr. Andrew Thornton, a mountain medicine specialist. “The disparity is stark. A British guide can earn £10,000 per expedition. A local guide might get £2,000. And the local support staff, the porters and cooks, earn pennies in comparison.”
The UK’s largest mountaineering body, the British Mountaineering Council, has now joined calls for mandatory minimum safety standards for all expeditions. This would include requiring emergency oxygen, satellite communications and a qualified medical professional on every team. It has also urged tour operators to publish their safety records and staff-to-client ratios.
But the reforms face strong opposition from some quarters. The Nepal Mountaineering Association has argued that such rules would price out smaller Nepali operators and damage the local economy. “We cannot put a blanket ban on affordable expeditions,” said association president Tika Ram Gurung. “Many local operators survive on thin margins. Safety costs money, and that money has to come from somewhere.”
For the guides themselves, the debate is personal. Kami Sherpa, speaking from a Kathmandu hospital where he is recovering from the amputation of both his feet, said: “I love the mountain. It has given me my livelihood. But it has also taken too much. I want my son to be a guide, but only if it can be made safer. We are not expendable.”
The UK government has so far not intervened, but the Foreign Office has issued a statement saying it is “monitoring the situation closely” and “encourages all tour companies to adhere to best practice.” Consumer rights groups are urging British climbers to scrutinise safety records before booking.
As the climbing season approaches, the question hangs over the industry: can Everest’s commercial boom be reconciled with the duty of care owed to those who make it possible? The answer, for now, remains buried in the thin air of the death zone.









