Everest gets 'easier': Success rate for climbing world's highest mountain has doubled in 30 years 'thanks to better equipment and technology' - but roughly 1 in 100 people still die trying

Twice as many mountaineers successfully climb Mount Everest now than three decades ago — but the death rate remains at around 1 per cent, a study has found.
Reaching some 29,030 feet above sea level, the summit of Everest in the Himalayas attracts around 500 climbers wanting to scale the world's tallest peak each spring.
The last thirty years have seen a increase in the number of people making the ascent — increasingly crowding the narrow route through the 'death zone' near the summit. 
This is the altitude above around 26,247 feet at which the oxygen pressure falls to the extent that it is unable to sustain human life for prolonged periods of time.
The findings of the new study also break down the demographics of climbers — such as by age, experience and sex — that conquered the peak or died during the effort.
Such data, researchers said, could help authorities decide whether to impose restrictions such as a maximum climbing age or minimum experience level. 
Twice as many mountaineers successfully climb Mount Everest, pictured, now than three decades ago — but the death rate remains at around 1 per cent, a study has found
'Mount Everest is still a very dangerous mountain, and climbing it will never become a walk in the park, because it's way above the limits of what most people can do,' said paper author and biologist Raymond Huey of the University of Washington. 
'Unfortunately, reported statistics of risk on Everest are often inaccurate.'
'By analysing climbing data, we provide accurate information on the chances of success and on the chances of dying, thereby helping climbers make an informed decision about whether to attempt this great peak.' 

In their study, Professor Huey and colleagues analysed the success and death rates for all first-time climbers who were granted a paid permit to try to summit Everest from 1990–2019. 
The team excluded mountaineers performing additional tasks during the climb — such as high-altitude porters, photographs and other support staff — along with those who were attempting to climb the summit for the second or more times.
Also excluded were a small selection of years during which the climbing season was cancelled as a result of ice fall avalanches or earthquakes.
Reaching 29,030 feet above sea level, the summit of Everest in the Himalayas attracts around 500 climbers wanting to scale the world's tallest peak each year. Pictured, the Everest base camp
Reaching 29,030 feet above sea level, the summit of Everest in the Himalayas attracts around 500 climbers wanting to scale the world's tallest peak each year. Pictured, the Everest base camp
Checking the altitude with GPS during the hike on the Manaslu circuit at Dharamsala
Checking the altitude with GPS during the hike on the Manaslu circuit at Dharamsala
The team found that the total number of first time climbers increased from around 2,200 between 1990 and 2005 to more than 3,600 in the period from 2006–2019.
Of these, two-thirds now manage to reach the summit, as opposed to the third in the earlier study period — and a 60-year-old climber today has the same success rate of around 40 per cent as a 40-year-old climber did before.
In both time periods, men and women had essentially the same of odds of success or death — however, women climbers now make up 5.5 per cent more of the total number of mountaineers climbing Everest for the first time.
The team credit the rise in the ratio of successful expeditions to factors including improved weather forecasting, increase usage of supplemental oxygen (and earlier on during the ascent) and the proliferation of fixed lines on popular routes. 
In addition, the researchers said, expedition leaders and high-altitude porters are now generally more experienced — although, in contrast, climbers today are tending to be less experienced than their predecessors of the 1990s and early 2000s. 
'Mount Everest is still a very dangerous mountain, and climbing it will never become a walk in the park, because it's way above the limits of what most people can do,' said biologist Raymond Huey of the University of Washington. Pictured, a signpost to Everest base camp
'Mount Everest is still a very dangerous mountain, and climbing it will never become a walk in the park, because it's way above the limits of what most people can do,' said biologist Raymond Huey of the University of Washington. Pictured, a signpost to Everest base camp
Professor Huey and colleagues sourced their data on the climbers from the so-called 'Himalayan Database', a website based on the records of the Kathmandu-based Reuters journalist Elizabeth Hawley.
Ms Hawley, who passed away in early 2018, maintained the official record of all climbs and summit successes for Everest and hundreds of other Nepalese peaks — with her work now continuing under new leadership.
'It's a remarkable data source,' Professor Huey commented. 
'She was legendary — climbers used to say you have not climbed Mount Everest until Ms Hawley says you've climbed Mount Everest,' he added.
The full findings of the study were published in the journal PLOS ONE.
Reaching some 29,030 feet above sea level, the summit of Everest in the Himalayas attracts around 500 climbers wanting to scale the world's tallest peak each spring
Reaching some 29,030 feet above sea level, the summit of Everest in the Himalayas attracts around 500 climbers wanting to scale the world's tallest peak each spring
Everest gets 'easier': Success rate for climbing world's highest mountain has doubled in 30 years 'thanks to better equipment and technology' - but roughly 1 in 100 people still die trying Everest gets 'easier': Success rate for climbing world's highest mountain has doubled in 30 years 'thanks to better equipment and technology' - but roughly 1 in 100 people still die trying Reviewed by Your Destination on August 27, 2020 Rating: 5

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