Opinion | Everest challenges mount 70 years after Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached top
- The two men were the first to scale Earth’s highest point, on May 29, 1953; mountaineering has since become increasingly popular and commercial
- There are big implications, including determined novices putting others’ lives at risk, overcrowding and environmental degradation
A sacred mountain for some, for others the world’s highest peak represents a challenge and a lifelong dream. Seventy years ago, on May 29, 1953, that challenge and dream became reality for two members of a British expedition: New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay became the first people to reach the 8,848-metre summit.
From our vantage in the present, it also represents a high point, not just in climbing terms, but in what we now think of as the modern era of mountaineering. Since then, mountaineering has become massively popular and commercial, with serious implications for the cultures and environments that sustain it.
Scaling the heights
The early mountaineering era began in 1786 when Jaques Balmat and Michel Paccard reached the summit of Mont Blanc, the highest peak in the European Alps at 4,808 metres. From 1854 to 1899 (known as the classic mountaineering period), advances in climbing technology saw ascending peaks by challenging routes become possible and popular.