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| Single-use plastics of less than 30 microns in thickness as well as drinks in plastic bottles are now banned on Mount Everest (AFP Photo/Phunjo LAMA) |
Single-use plastics have been banned in the Everest region to reduce the vast amounts of waste left by trekkers and mountaineers, Nepali authorities said Thursday.
In addition
to seeing a record number of climbers this year, a government-led cleaning
initiative on Everest -- the world's highest mountain -- also collected over 10
tonnes of trash.
The new ban
in Khumbu Pasang Lhamu rural municipality, home to Mount Everest and several
other snow-capped mountains, covers all plastic of less than 30 microns in
thickness as well as drinks in plastic bottles, and will be effective from
January.
"If we
start now, it will help keep our region, the Everest and the mountains clean
long term," local official Ganesh Ghimire told AFP.
The region
receives over 50,000 tourists every year, including climbers and trekkers.
The local body will work with trekking companies, airlines and the Nepal Mountaineering Association to enforce the ban, though no penalty has yet been decided for violation.
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Melting
glaciers are now exposing bodies and litter that have accumulated on
Mount
Everest since the first successful summit (AFP Photo/PRAKASH MATHEMA)
|
The local body will work with trekking companies, airlines and the Nepal Mountaineering Association to enforce the ban, though no penalty has yet been decided for violation.
Environmentalists
are also concerned that the pollution on Everest is affecting water sources
down in the valley.
Six years
ago, Nepal introduced a US$4,000 deposit per team of climbers on Everest that
would be refunded if each climber brought down at least eight kilos (18 pounds)
of waste, but only half of the climbers return with the required amount.
Melting
glaciers caused by global warming are now exposing bodies and litter that have
accumulated on the mountain since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay made the
first successful summit 66 years ago.
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Environmentalists
are concerned that pollution on Mount Everest is affecting
water sources down
in the valley (AFP Photo/PRAKASH MATHEMA)
|
This year's
climbing season saw a record 885 people summit Everest, 644 of them from the
south and 241 from the northern flank in Tibet.
This,
combined with poor weather and the inexperience of some of the climbers,
contributed to a deadly season in which 11 people died.
Last week a
government committee recommended that climbers scale another Nepal mountain of
at least 6,500 metres (21,325 feet) before being given permission to attempt
Everest.
It also
proposed a fee of at least $35,000 for Everest and $20,000 for other mountains
over 8,000 metres. Currently, permits for Everest cost $11,000.



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