A veteran Nepalese guide who fell into a crevasse on Mount Everest and survived after 18 hours buried in ice has raised urgent questions about safety standards for British expedition companies. The guide, 38 year old Kami Sherpa, was discovered by a rescue team with severe frostbite and hypothermia. He is now recovering in a Kathmandu hospital, but his narrow escape has spotlighted the high risk, low regulation world of high altitude tourism.
British climbers account for a significant share of Everest permits each year, with firms charging up to £70,000 per client. Critics argue that cost cutting and rushed schedules are putting lives at risk. The incident occurred during a summit push from the South Col, the highest camp, where fixed ropes are often frayed and oxygen supplies thin.
Kami Sherpa’s team had been descending when the snow bridge beneath him collapsed. He fell 60 metres into a hidden crevasse. “I thought I would die there,” he told reporters. “The cold was so strong. I could not move my hands.” His survival is attributed to an air pocket and the quick action of fellow guides who alerted base camp.
But campaigners say the story is a warning. “This is not a one off,” said Ang Dorjee, a former guide and safety advocate. “Every season we see close calls. The problem is the commercial pressure. Companies want to get clients to the top and back in the shortest window. That means less time for acclimatisation, less margin for error.”
British firms such as Himalayan Ascent and 7 Summits Club have been contacted for comment but have not responded. The British Mountaineering Council says it is reviewing safety protocols but has no direct regulatory power over expedition operators in Nepal.
For the Sherpa community, the risks are part of the job but the rewards are thin. Many guides earn less than £3,000 for a season, a fraction of what Western climbers pay. “We are the ones who carry the gear, fix the ropes, carry the oxygen,” said Kami Sherpa. “But our families get nothing if we die.”
The Nepalese government requires all climbers to have insurance, but loopholes remain. Rescue helicopters cannot operate above certain altitudes. And the number of permits issued each spring has doubled in a decade, straining resources.
As Kami Sherpa’s story spreads, the question is whether British adventurers will demand better standards or continue to gamble with life and limb. The answer may determine the future of Everest itself.








