A message from the melting slopes of Everest
The sons of Hillary and Tenzing speak out about climate change: "Believe us, 
it's a reality"
By Cahal Milmo and Sam Relph
Published: 06 July 2007

Fifty-four years after Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first 
men to scale Everest, their sons have said the mountain is now so ravaged by 
climate change that they would no longer recognise it.

On the eve of the Live Earth concerts this weekend, Peter Hillary and Jamling 
Tenzing yesterday issued a timely warning that global warming is rapidly 
changing the face of the world's highest mountain and threatening the survival 
of billions of people who rely on its glaciers for drinking water.

The base camp where Sir Edmund and Norgay began their ascent is 40 metres lower 
than it was in 1953. The glacier on which it stands, and those around it, are 
melting at such a rate that scientists believe the mountain, whose Nepalese 
name, Qomolangma, means Mother of the World, could be barren rock by 2050.
Full article: 
http://environment.independent.co.uk/climate_change/article2739751.ece

Reply via email to