A Sherpa guide’s harrowing escape from an avalanche on Mount Everest has triggered a British-led investigation into safety standards across the Himalayan trekking industry. The guide, identified as Pemba Dorji, was buried under six feet of snow for nearly 20 minutes before being rescued by a team of climbers using handheld avalanche transceivers. His survival, described by medics as ‘miraculous’, has exposed glaring gaps in emergency preparedness and regulation.
The probe, spearheaded by the UK’s Foreign Office and the British Mountaineering Council, will examine everything from guide certification to communication infrastructure on the world’s highest peak. ‘This is not just about one man’s luck,’ said Dr. Eleanor Ashcroft, a risk analyst at the University of Cambridge.
‘It’s about a system that prioritises profit over people.’ With Everest generating over £200 million annually in permits alone, critics argue that commercial operators cut corners to maximise throughput. Pemba’s story has become a rallying cry for reform, forcing a global conversation about the ethics of adventure tourism in the age of climate change.








