Nepal calls for help to settle Everest height

The world’s highest peak is said to be 8,848m high but China measures it 4m lower, while US says it is 8,850m high.


Afp February 29, 2012

KATHMANDU: Nepal is appealing to international donors to help it finally settle a long-running dispute over the height of Mount Everest, a government official said Wednesday.

The world’s highest peak, which straddles Nepal and China, is usually attributed a height of 8,848 metres (29,029 feet) following an Indian survey in 1954, but other more recent measurements have varied by several metres.

China measures the peak four metres lower – by excluding the snowcap – while in 1999 an American team using GPS technology recorded a height of 8,850 metres, a figure used by the US National Geographic Society.

Nepal’s state-run Survey Department told AFP it was seeking to obtain grants and expertise from international donors, as well as the global scientific community.

“This is part of the ongoing three-year Nepal government project to settle the mountain’s height. But we have neither the scientific expertise nor the resources to carry out such tasks,” said director-general Krishna Raj BC.

“We have already measured from sea level to the base camp. But the difficult part is from there on. We need to train Sherpas on how to measure the height scientifically. For example, we need to carry up GPS equipment.”

He said Italian scientists researching the mountain had already expressed an interest in providing help.

Everest was first measured in 1856, nearly 100 years before it was conquered by Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary.

In 2010, Nepal and China reached a compromise under which Nepal measured the height of Everest’s snowcap at 8,848 metres and China measured the rock peak at 8,844 metres.

COMMENTS (6)

John | 12 years ago | Reply

As well, in Nepal, half the population live below the poverty line, and about one third of the population lives without clear water.,,,

Priorities?..........

John | 12 years ago | Reply

This kind of story drives me nuts. Nepal seeks international funding for the useless confirmation or correction of the height of a mountain by maybe 3 meters, instead of using these funds for hundreds of better uses (poverty, shelter issues, malnutrition, climate change, crime, third world injustices, better schooling, etc.). Are these people completely clueless, or do they simply have no concept of perspective.....

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