Second-highest peak K2 turns into garbage mountain

Sep 13, 2022

Gilgit-Baltistan [PoK], September 13 : K2, the second-highest mountain on the planet after Mount Everest, has become a 'garbage mountain' as a mound of trash has piled up, raising environmental concerns.
The hilarious scene on the peak was captured by several tourists who went there for trekking. Notably, K2 is one of the most difficult peaks to summit in the world and a popular site for mountaineers.
Gilgit-Baltistan Tourism Department as cited by Dawn newspaper said that, in the 2022 summer alone, 204 permits were issued for expeditions on the K2, compared to a total of 1,800 permits issued for all the 8,000m peaks in the region.
On July 22, Wajid Nagar and his team began the journey to scale the mighty K2.
"As soon as we reached Camp 1 on the K2, in front of us was pile upon pile of trash which included corpses, abandoned ropes, tin packs, tents, climbing gears, human waste, and plastic wrappers," Wajid said, as quoted by Dawn.
A US-based mountaineer Sarah Strattan, who arrived in Gilgit-Baltistan in June for a K2 summit had similar concerns.
"Camps 1 and 2 were the worst with trash -- old tents, gear, food packaging, fuel cans, human waste, old ropes, etc," she told Dawn.
She further explained that the trash created many problems for climbers, especially when it came to sanitation.
"We melt the snow for water in all camps and if the snow is dirty, it can make us sick," she said.
Meanwhile, the GB government organised a campaign to clear the garbage earlier this year, after almost a decade.
Quoting Yasir Hussain, director of the Central Karakoram National Park (CKNP), Dawn reported that a team of eight climbers was sent to collect the trash from the K2 basecamp all the way up to Camp 4, at a height of 7,800m.
"The team ended up collecting 1,610kg of trash, including climbing gear, tents, ropes, cylinders, batteries, and shopping bags," he said.
The garbage was then discarded at CKNP's dumpsite. As per the official, separate camps had been set up for collecting waste every year and an incinerator was also fixed in the Askoli area to recycle and burn it. He admitted the waste this summer was the highest collected in years because of the number of expeditions on the mountain, as per Dawn.