A Nepali climbing guide has been rescued from near the summit of Mount Everest after spending six days stranded in the mountain's 'death zone', an ordeal that British mountaineers involved in the operation have described as a miracle. The guide, known only as Mingma, was discovered alive on Wednesday at an altitude of approximately 8,000 metres, having survived extreme cold, low oxygen, and the brutal conditions of the Himalayan peak.
The rescue was initiated after a team of British climbers heard faint radio calls during their own ascent. They alerted base camp, and a joint effort involving Nepali guides and international mountaineers was launched. The rescue team faced severe weather and technical challenges, eventually reaching the guide using fixed ropes and supplementary oxygen. Mingma was found conscious but suffering from frostbite and severe dehydration. He was stabilised at the scene and slowly descended to a lower camp where he received emergency medical care before being airlifted to Kathmandu.
Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent, notes that this event highlights the increasing risks on Everest due to climate change. Warmer temperatures are destabilising glaciers and altering weather patterns, creating more frequent and severe storms. The 2024 spring climbing season saw an unusually high number of rescue operations, with meteorologists linking this to a warming atmosphere that holds more moisture and energy.
The survival of a climber for six days above 8,000 metres is rare. Medical experts explain that the body typically begins to deteriorate rapidly above 8,000 metres, a zone where atmospheric pressure is less than a third of sea level. Cognitive function declines, and cellular damage from hypoxia sets in. Mingma's survival may be attributed to his high-altitude acclimatisation and the fact that he had a small shelter and some supplies, but even with these advantages, the odds are minuscule.
This incident has reignited debates about regulation on Everest. Calls for improved safety protocols, mandatory use of supplemental oxygen above certain altitudes, and better communication systems have grown louder. The Nepali government, which issues hundreds of permits each season, is under pressure to act. However, the economics of mountaineering are a powerful counterforce: the climbing industry is a major contributor to Nepal's economy.
For the wider scientific community, this story is a stark reminder of the biosphere's fragility. High-altitude environments are among the first to show the effects of a changing climate. The ice that holds these mountains together is melting at an accelerating rate. The very structure of the Himalayas is shifting. And as the planet warms, the window for safe climbing narrows.
The British mountaineers who helped orchestrate the rescue have downplayed their role, insisting that the real miracle is the human body's capacity to endure. But as Dr. Vance would caution, miracles are not a reliable survival strategy. The data is clear: the conditions on Everest are becoming more dangerous. And the question that hangs in the thin air is how many more rescues, or tragedies, will occur before we take the long view of this planetary crisis.









