In what can only be described as a triumph of human endurance over common sense, a guide on Everest has survived a near-death experience, prompting the British Mountaineering Council to issue a flurry of safety protocols that read like a corporate memo written by a man who has never actually climbed a mountain. The council, a collection of tweed-clad armchair alpinists, has apparently decided that the solution to tourists clogging the death zone is more laminated forms and reflective vests.
The guide, a Nepali man whose name you won't remember because Western media prefers to focus on the struggle of the actual locals rather than their triumphs, reportedly survived after being left for dead at high altitude. His miraculous recovery has raised questions about the ethics of for-profit Everest expeditions, where climbers queue for the summit like shoppers at a Boxing Day sale, breathing bottled oxygen and leaving a trail of discarded energy bars and moral bankruptcy.
Let me paint you a picture: Everest is now less a mountain and more a queasy metaphor for late-stage capitalism. The summit route is littered with the frozen bodies of those who couldn't afford the premium rescue package. The British Mountaineering Council's new safety protocol includes mandatory 'briefing sessions' that will no doubt be conducted in a hotel lobby in Kathmandu where climbers are told not to die in ways that might inconvenience the travel insurance underwriters. They've also suggested a 'buddy system' which is about as useful as a chocolate teapot when the oxygen runs out at 8,000 metres.
The council's statement, delivered with all the gravitas of a man who hasn't broken a sweat since the 1990s, calls for 'enhanced communication' and 'risk assessment matrices'. Because nothing says 'survival' like a risk assessment matrix. Perhaps they should also introduce a suggestion box at Base Camp, and have the Sherpas wear name badges for better customer service.
The real story here is not the survival of one man but the systematic exploitation of a mountain and its people. Everest has become a grim theme park for the wealthy, where tickets to the top cost £50,000 and the ride includes guaranteed frostbite and a high chance of death. The Sherpas, who do the heavy lifting and risk their lives for a fraction of the climbers' fees, are the invisible backbone of this circus. And the British Mountaineering Council, in its infinite wisdom, thinks the problem is a lack of laminated safety cards.
I propose a simpler protocol: abolish the entire industry. Turn Everest into a wildlife sanctuary for yaks and snow leopards. Let the mountain reclaim its dignity. But no, we must have our adventure tourism, our Instagram summit selfies, our chance to prove that money can buy a view of the world from its highest perch, even if it costs a few lives along the way.
The council's new rules will be ignored as soon as the winds pick up. The tourists will still queue, the Sherpas will still die, and the mountain will continue its slow transformation into a garbage dump. But at least now there will be a form to fill out. Progress, of a sort.








