On the roof of the world, a story of survival has reignited a fierce debate about who gets to climb it. Pemba Sherpa, a 34-year-old guide, was found alive after being swept into a crevasse during a sudden storm near the South Col. His rescue, after 14 hours buried in snow, was nothing short of miraculous. But as the mountaineering community celebrates his life, a quieter, more uncomfortable question surfaces: at what cost does the Everest tourism machine grind on?
The tragedy that almost was has become a flashpoint for British climbers who have long argued for tighter regulations. Sir Edmund Hillary’s mountain, they point out, has become a circus of inexperienced thrill-seekers and profit-driven outfitters. The numbers are stark: in 2023, Nepal issued a record 478 permits, each costing $11,000. With support staff and logistics, that means over 600 people could be attempting the summit on a single day. The bottleneck near the Hillary Step is no longer a mountaineering challenge: it is a queue for death.
I spoke to James Thornton, a 52-year-old British surgeon who summited in 2019 and has since become an outspoken critic of the current system. “The industry is running on a razor’s edge,” he told me, his voice still carrying the raw edge of someone who has seen bodies left in the ice. “We’re not regulating who guides. We’re not checking the experience of clients. And we keep having near misses that are brushed aside because the money flows.”
But the debate is not just about safety: it is about culture. For the Sherpa community, guiding is a livelihood that has lifted families out of poverty. Pemba’s rescue was carried out by his fellow Sherpas, who risked their own lives without hesitation. To impose strict western standards, some argue, is a form of cultural imperialism. Nawang Lama, a Sherpa guide of 20 years, put it bluntly: “People come here and tell us how to do our job. But they don’t understand the mountain like we do. The regulations they want would just mean fewer jobs for my people.”
And yet, the human cost is undeniable. On the street in Kathmandu, I met a young Nepali woman whose father died on Everest in 2014. She runs a tea shop near the tourist district, and her face hardened when I mentioned the new calls for regulation. “They talk about safety, but they don’t pay us enough to be safe. The permits are expensive, but the guides get so little. If they want to fix it, they should pay us first.”
The British mountaineering establishment has a proposed solution: mandatory experience requirements, a cap on permits, and an independent international body to oversee operations on the mountain. But in Nepal, these proposals are met with suspicion. At a press conference this morning, Nepal’s tourism minister, Dambar Bahadur Karki, accused the British of a “colonial attitude” and insisted that Nepal alone has the right to manage its mountains.
Meanwhile, Pemba Sherpa recovers in a clinic in Lukla, his frostbitten fingers wrapped in gauze. He has not spoken publicly yet, but his brother told reporters that Pemba is grateful to be alive but “frightened” by the attention. The irony is cruel: a man whose life depends on the Everest industry now finds himself at the centre of a storm that could reshape it.
What happens next will be a test of our collective conscience. Everest is more than a mountain: it is a symbol of human ambition and, increasingly, of our inability to reconcile profit with safety. As the tourist season ramps up, the world waits to see if this near-death will finally spur change, or if the sheer force of the tourism dollar will carry on, indifferent to the bodies in its wake.









