A common question for Everest climbers is if they can be rescued. Yes, s rescues are available by human power and with helicopters but with huge risks. I update this popular post as as we prepare for Everest 2014.
In this world of instant communication, even from the summit of Everest, some people believe rescues are easy and available on the high mountains. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
When a climber gets sick there are generally three options: on your own, help from others or helicopter rescue.
If the climber needs assistance, it generally falls on the Sherpas to help. Strong expedition guides also sometimes contribute.
Manpower
I have seen climbers with snow blindness short roped by Sherpas down the Lhotse Face. This is a technique where the climber is tied to another climber, sometimes in front and behind to guide him or her lower. The climber is able to walk on their own but needs significant help. It is slow, cumbersome and dangerous.
I have also seen climbers dragged down steep faces using their sleeping bags or in rare occasions, a canvas sled. Again, this takes enormous manpower to keep the individual going straight, or carried over crevasses or bumps. If the grip is lost, the climber risk more injury or even death by dropping into a crevasse. It can take five to ten Sherpas to safely lower someone on Everest.
In 2012, it took a dedicated team of seven Sherpas, two days to retrieve the body of Shirya Shah-Klorfine after she died between the South Col (Camp 4) and the Balcony. She was helicoptered back to Kathmandu from Camp 2 at a reported cost of $25,000.
Helicopters
Helicopter are available but only from some camps on a huge mountain like Everest. There are no helicopter rescues available on the north side of Everest as the Chinese prohibit helicopters flying over Everest or to Base Camp.
In the “old” days, 2008 and earlier, the Nepal Army was the dominate provider of helicopter services for climbing expeditions. It was dangerous, difficult, expensive and took a lot of work to arrange an evacuation. Today, a private company, Fishtail Air, is often hired for evacuations with their helicopter fleet.
While not a tourist flight in Hawaii, it is slightly safer and much easier and more reliable than the Army. The Army still helps with large load transport. I wrote an article in 2010 on Fishtail that examines helicopter services in Nepal. Today they land at Camp 2 (21,000’/6400m) in the Western Cwm, but not higher.
Depending on where the helicopter flights starts and fly to, it costs between USD$4,000 to $20,000 per flight and is very weather dependent. Some years over 30 people are helicoptered from Base Camp to Lukla at a cost of $4,000, or more, each due to illness. Most climbers have rescue insurance to cover the costs but insurance companies are getting wary of this coverage.
2013 Highest Rescue Ever
In 2013, Sudarshan Gautam summited but fell near the Yellow Band on May 21st. He was rescued using a ‘long line’ from a helicopter. This was a record for an alpine helicopter rescue as it was at 7800 meters. They did not land but dropped a line that was attach to the injured climber.
The previous record was 6,900 m (22,637 ft) by a team of Fishtail Air & Air Zermatt on 29th April, 2010 also using ‘human sling operation’ on Mt. Annapurna.
1996 Rescue
Helicopter rescue on Everest came to the world’s attention during the 1996 disaster. In his book, Into Thin Air, Jon Krakauer detailed the daring rescue of climbers at the top of the Icefall at 19,800?.
Nepal pilot and army captain, KC Madan, became a hero with his rescue of Beck Weathers and Makalu Gau via a stripped down helicopter, a B-2 Squirrel A-Star Ecuriel helicopter, that barely flew in the thin air of the Western Cwm.
Today, the helicopters are more advanced. Fishtail air in Kathmandu worked on new techniques with Switzerland’s Air Zermatt’s who has a track record of rescue operations have saved many lives in Europe.
Helicopters can fly higher than the summit of Everest but landing to take on a passenger or body is dangerous as as previously mention has never occured above Camp 2 on the Nepal side.
Air Zermatt is also known as an expert in conducting Human Sling Operations, a difficult aerial rescue maneuver involving dropping an expert mountain guide at an inaccessible point to lift stranded people using ropes.
In 2005, Eurocopter claimed a helicopter landing on the summit of Everest. It was a serial Ecureuil/AStar AS 350 B3 piloted by the Eurocopter X test pilot Didier Delsalle. They reported landing on the summit for 2 minutes before returning to Lukla.
According to an interview with climber and helicopter pilot Simone Moro, the Fishtail helicopters are rated to reach an altitude of 23,051’/7026m but have flown as high as 7400m. This would be between Camp 3 and the South Col on Everest.
Crashes
It is easy to be lulled into thinking helicopters are a safe and easy, albeit expensive, way of getting to the high camps. But as I reported in November 2010, one of the Fishtail helicopters crashed performing a rescue on nearby Ama Dablam (22,349′ /6812 m). There have been two other crashes of the Fishtail helicopters.
On Ama Dablam two climbers needed help. One was successfully snatched from the mountain side and as the helicopter was returning for the second climber, it crashed. It appeared to “fall out of the sky”, according to eye-witnesses.
In 1973, an Italian Army helicopter crashed around 20,670’/6300m. Wreckage from that crash was only removed in 2011 after the Khumbu Icefall took it lower.
There have been multiple deadly helicopter crashes at Everest Base Camp including 1997, 2003, 2005 and 2007.
Just last year, an Air Dynasty helicopter crashed at the Lukla airport when the tail section hit a wire fence. And in June, the helicopter owned by Simone Moro crashed.
For 2014, the Ministry of Tourism has reportedly banned all “tourist” flights in and out of Everest Base Camp unless it is an emergency or rescue. It will be interesting to see what impact this has on climbers wanting to fly out before their summit bid or after their climb. While tempting at the end of a long season, they miss what I think is one of the parts of an Everest climb, the Khumbu trek.
Climb On!
Alan
Memories are Everything
2 thoughts on “Everest 2014: Can I be Rescued on Everest?”
I was under the impression that climbers with enough money were using helos as “commuter transport” (for lack of a better word) to travel in and out of low camps. Is my impression correct?
You’re correct That is the problem. As one climber said about 2013, it was like camping at an airport. So the Nepal Government has said they will stop all such flights for 2014. We will see.
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