By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Forever Change of Climbing
Specialist
Sherpas who hail from the nearby hills and mountains have been navigating
and setting the trail for climbers on Everest for seven decades. Dozens have
lost their lives in the process. Pandey, of Airlift Technology, a local
drone-mapping start-up, believes that with his technical expertise in using
drones combined with the Sherpas’ decades of mountaineering knowledge, they can
make it safer to be on the roof of the world.
Everest Base Camp is
located at a height of about 5,364 meters (17,598 ft) above sea level and Camp
One at 6,065 meters (19,900 feet).
The aerial distance
between the two points is roughly 1.8 miles. It takes Sherpas six to seven
hours to make this journey, but it takes a drone about six to seven minutes.
Airlift Nepal’s first
clean-up drive used a drone to bring down about 1100 pounds of trash from Camp
One to Base Camp.
That took more than
40 flights: The drone can carry about 66 pounds of weight, but they only
transport about 44 pounds at a time to be safe.
For the 2025 Everest
climbing season, Pandey says that Airlift Technology will help Sherpas
transport equipment before the season starts, then pick up trash once it
begins.
The Sherpas tell
Pandey which direction they need to go, then Pandey flies a small drone first
to navigate the trail. Then, the Sherpas do what they’ve always done — climb to
the precarious icefalls, or the parts of a glacier that are the hardest to navigate.
“Once they find out
‘here we need a ladder,’ ‘here we need a rope,’ they will send us the
coordinates via walkie-talkie and then we fly the equipment there,” Pandey
explained. The drones are also able to fly in life-saving equipment like oxygen
cylinders and medicines.
A drone begins to lower a ladder onto the Khumbu
Glacier.
Scaling up
Airlift currently has
two DJI drones, only one of which is being operated on Everest this year. The
second one is a backup, and if there’s need for more
drone flights, they’ll consider deploying both.
One challenge is
money. Each drone costs $70,000, and that’s before they even begin operating.
Everything is
expensive at Base Camp, because there’s no electricity
one needs a lot of fuel to charge batteries. The cost of actually
getting to the camp, the manpower cost, accommodation, food, is a lot.
For Bikram, an
aeronautical engineer, drones have always been a passion. He made a “DIY Drone”
in Nepal over a decade ago at a time when they were almost nonexistent in the
country. This proved vital in assisting aid efforts during the 2015 Nepal
earthquake.
“It’s not just that
we are providing equipment. Search and rescue is one
of our main priorities. When people veer off the trail
we can help geolocate them,” Pandey added.
Some in the Sherpa
community are turning away from working in the perilous high mountains and
instead are moving abroad for better jobs and pay.
Drones will actually make this a safer profession and bring more people
back to this climbing tradition. Without the expertise of the Sherpas they never would never be
able to navigate this terrain.
Behind the Front Man
An Airlift Technology drone in action.
A team of Sherpas is
led by an elder who has developed his expertise in navigation and decides the
trail, but it is the front man with his might and youth who goes to the icefall
first.
However while drones can now be used to determine a tentative
path before they set out, inclement weather means that things are constantly
changing.
It
is is a risky
job, and with employment hard to come by, this work has been more about the
paycheck than the passion. Drones have been reducing time and risk level by
half.
The first group of
climbers have reached Base Camp for the 2025 climbing season. It’s a narrow
season, so almost everyone will attempt their ascents in April and May.
Drone use “is part of
the evolution of climbing,” says Caroline Ogle of New Zealand-based Adventure
Consultants, who has spent five seasons at Base Camp managing expeditions from
what she refers to as “the amphitheater of Everest.”
“If you compare back
to the early years … when there were no satellite phones or the kind of weather
forecasting we have available now, all those types of
technology have evolved to make climbing safer. I feel the use of drones is
part of that natural evolution, particularly in the context of making things
safer for the high altitude workers (Sherpas),” Ogle
said.
Lisa Thompson, who
has climbed the seven summits the highest peak on all seven of the traditional
continents and now trains climbers through US based Alpine Athletics, agrees
with Ogle and sees drones as a “welcome and responsible evolution.”
“I don’t believe this
innovation takes away from the craft or tradition of climbing. The mountain is
still the mountain. The challenge is still real.”
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