Netflix’s ’14 Peaks’ inspires climbers to Chinese convoy attain Himalayan heights
Only about 50 climbers have climbed all mountain peaks above 8,000 metres, a feat that took most years, or even decades, to complete.
Nima Rinji
Sherpa, 18, seeks to be the
youngest mountaineer to
climb all the 14 peaks
By Eastern EyeOct 18, 2024
A RECORD number of climbers are gathered in Tibet to complete mountaineering’s pinnacle achievement, summiting the world’s tallest 14 peaks.
Only about 50 climbers have climbed all mountain peaks above 8,000 metres, a feat that took most years, or even decades, to complete. About 20 are vying for the record books this month, some spurred by a blockbuster Netflix documentary '14 Peaks', giving the endeavour a wider profile.
Technological advancements have made the feat easier to accomplish.
“We are growing as a community, and we are representing mountaineering all over the world,” Pakistani climber Shehroze Kashif, 22, told AFP.
“I think that’s great... they are completing their dream, as I am.”
It took Italian climber Reinhold Messner 16 years from his initial summit to become the first person in the world considered to have climbed all 14 peaks in 1986.
But most of the climbers assembled in the Chinese Himalayas at the base camp of Mount Shisha Pangma only began their attempts within the past few years.
They have already summited the 13 other highest peaks, located in the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges, straddling Nepal, Pakistan, Tibet and India.
Many have been waiting to scale the 8,027-metre-high Tibetan peak since last year, when China closed the mountain after two American women and their Nepali guides were killed in an avalanche.
The aspirants are a mix of seasoned veterans and rising stars. Teenage Nepali climber Nima Rinji Sherpa, 18, aims to be the youngest to climb all 14.
Several hope to be the first from their respective countries to accomplish the feat.
Advances in mountaineering technology, weather forecasting and logistical support have made this once-inaccessible goal more achievable – particularly for those who can afford it.
Mingma Sherpa of Seven Summit Treks, Nepal’s biggest mountaineering expedition company, told AFP that climbers could expect to pay up to $700,000 (£534,327.5) for full support teams.
But he said the hefty price tag had not dissuaded a growing number of people from pursuing the endeavour.
“They climb one or two, and then the mountains attract them,” he said. “Soon they might decide to climb them all”.
Teams of support crews and helicopters for rapid transportation between base camps have allowed climbers to tackle multiple mountains in a single season.
“It is clear that the pioneers back then, they did much more difficult, dangerous and exceptional ascents,” German mountaineering chronicler Eberhard Jurgalski told AFP.
“Now it is possible to do them within three months. The logistics are so worldclass now.”
British-Nepali climber Nirmal Purja famously completed the 14 peaks in just over six months in 2019, shattering the previous record of seven years.
His efforts were chronicled in a Netflix documentary, inspiring a new wave of athletes to try and eclipse his speed run.
Norwegian climber Kristin Harila and her Nepali guide Tenjen Lama Sherpa – the latter who died attempting to summit Shisha Pangma last year – now hold the record. They climbed the giant mountains in 92 days, ending in July 2023.
The pair also reached the “true summits” of all the mountains, which many previous climbers had missed.
This month, at least six have already completed the feat after summiting Shisha Pangma, including the first Japanese, Pakistani and female American climbers.
They also included Nirmal Purja again, who this time said he was climbing all 14 without supplementary oxygen.
The trend towards speed has not always been welcomed by the mountaineering fraternity. Veteran climbers have criticised Purja and Harila for using helicopters, preprepared routes and support teams.
Dawa Yangzum Sherpa, who is aiming to become the first woman from Nepal to summit all 14 peaks, said the style of ascent dictated how much it was valued by other alpinists. “Some climb 14 peaks... and maybe even have climbed Everest several times, but some don’t have the capacity to climb without support,” she told AFP.
But Russian climber Alina Pekova, also attempting the Tibetan summit to finish her 14-peak climb, said that speed ascents were an endurance test. “If you can climb it a fast way, why not try?” she told AFP. “That’s another challenge.”
Reeves said she hoped the Bank of England would make further interest rate cuts after her budget measures, which will be aimed at easing the cost of living pressures on households. (Photo: Getty Images)
CHANCELLOR Rachel Reeves has said Brexit and past government spending cuts have had a greater negative impact on the UK economy than previously estimated, as she prepares for a budget expected to include tax rises alongside measures to support growth.
In comments reported by The Guardian, Reeves said she aimed to counter an anticipated downgrade in Britain’s economic growth forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR).
"We also know - and the OBR, I think, is going to be pretty frank about this - that things like austerity, the cuts to capital spending and Brexit have had a bigger impact on our economy than even was projected back then," she was quoted as saying by the newspaper during a conference in Birmingham.
"That's why we are unashamedly rebuilding our relations with the European Union to reduce some of those costs that were, in my view, needlessly added to businesses since 2016 and since we formally left a few years ago."
The OBR has estimated that Brexit will reduce Britain’s long-term productivity level by 4 per cent compared with remaining in the European Union.
On Saturday, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said Brexit was likely to continue weighing on Britain’s economic growth in the coming years.
Data published earlier showed Britain’s public borrowing in the first half of the financial year was the highest on record, except during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, maintaining pressure on Reeves ahead of the 26 November budget.
Later on Tuesday, Reeves told the Financial Times she hoped the Bank of England would make further interest rate cuts after her budget measures, which will be aimed at easing the cost of living pressures on households.
"There will be targeted action in the budget around prices because I want to bring down the cost of living for families," Reeves said. "And I want to see interest rates, which have gone down five times in the last year and a bit, come down further."
Britain currently has the highest inflation rate among Group of Seven economies, at 3.8 per cent in August. The Bank of England expects it to peak at 4 per cent in September before returning to its 2 per cent target in the spring of 2027.
Governor Andrew Bailey and his colleagues have said the inflation outlook remains uncertain, making it difficult to predict when further interest rate cuts may occur.
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