By Mukesh Pokhrel
When Pemba Sherpa last spoke to her husband, Nepali sherpa DawaTshering, by phone in October, the guide was preparing to lead his clients down Manaslu, the world’s eighth highest mountain, after bad weather scuppered a summit attempt.
Tshering promised to ring her when he arrived at base camp.The call never came.
On the way down the mountain, the 32-year-old was killed in a massive avalanche – the kind of threat that is becoming increasingly common in the high Himalayas due to warmer temperatures fuelled by climate change.
His widow, who lives in the capital, Kathmandu, wonders how she will survive and keep their 13-year-old son in school.
While Pemba Sherpa received 1.5 million Nepali rupees (about R200 000) in life insurance after Tshering’s death, as is mandated by law, she said the sum was inadequate, given that her late husband made about a million rupees a year as a guide.
“How (do I) survive? I don’t have any job,” she said at her family’s rented flat, tearfully looking at a photo of her husband on the wall. “My husband used to say: ‘You do not need to do any job. I do the labour.’”
Each year, thousands of visitors flock to Nepal to visit or climb its mountains, creating work for tens of thousands of people as guides, porters and other staff, as well as in tourism-related jobs.
Of these workers, the Nepal Mountaineering Association (NMA) says at least 10 000 are sherpas, the Himalayan ethnic group renowned for leading expeditions in the Everest region.
However, as climate change accelerates melting of glaciers and ice, the work is becoming increasing perilous.
With few benefits available to bereft families, more mountain guides are pondering whether it might be time to give up the profession.
In 2022, seven people died on Manaslu, including four sherpas and three climbers, according to the tourism department. Over the past decade, at least 177 people have died on Nepal’s mountains – 68 of them sherpas – due to avalanches or accidents.
Mingma Sherpa, the chairperson of Nepali firm Seven Summit Treks, said he had heard of about 500 sherpa guides leaving the industry and going abroad to seek other work in the past five years, and that many more young people planned to follow suit.
The main drivers were the growing dangers and the lack of social security or welfare support, beyond the mandatory life compensation, for guides who die during expeditions, he said.
“We have been demanding (a welfare fund) for several years, but the government is not serious about the sherpas’ issues,” he said.
Dhananjay Regmi, the head of Nepal’s tourism board, said life insurance payouts were “very low” and should be raised more than sixfold, to at least 10 million rupees.
GROWING AVALANCHE RISK
Although sherpas’ local knowledge makes them well-accustomed to difficult conditions climbing Nepal’s mountains, the changing climate and erratic weather are making their work riskier, according to Nima Nuru Sherpa, the president of the NMA.
Like Mingma Sherpa, Nima Nuru said his association had been urging the government to set up a welfare fund that would also cover health and education costs for the families of the deceased.
A 2020 study by academics at Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan University found that while avalanches and casualties were most common in the Khumbu region, which is on the Nepalese side of Mount Everest, such incidents and deaths had also increased in other parts of Nepal.
Abnormal weather was on the rise in Nepal, said Indira Kandel, a senior meteorologist at the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology.
For example, the monsoon season used to finish by the end of September but now lasted until the second week of October, he said.
Mingma Sherpa, of Seven Summit Treks, said his company’s expeditions were being hit by ever-more-challenging weather.
“Heavy snowfall during the climbing season increases the risk of avalanches because new snow does not freeze,” he said.
As climate change heated the planet, the Himalayan region would lose a third of its glacial ice mass by the end of the century “even in the (most) optimistic climate scenarios”, said Santosh Nepal, a researcher at the International Water Management Institute.
“In business-as-usual scenarios, two-thirds of the glaciers will be gone,” he added.
GOVERNMENT PLEDGES ACTION
Just a week before the death of Dawa Tshering, another guide, 33-year-old Anup Rai, was killed by an avalanche on Manaslu, leaving his wife and two children without an income.
“I don’t have any income… my life is broken, I am not able to think any more,” said Rai’s widow Lalita, adding that she needed $380 a month to afford to live in Kathmandu. Her late husband earned about 45 800 rupees a month on average.
The plight of Lalita Rai and Pemba Sherpa highlighted the lack of state support for bereaved families, said Mingma Sherpa.
Nepal’s government generates $6.7million in revenue each year by issuing climbing permits, according to the tourism department, and Mingma said it should allocate between five and 10% of the money to a welfare fund to support bereaved families.
Suresh Adhikari, the secretary of the Ministry of Culture,Tourism and Civil Aviation, said there was a problem with financial support for sherpa guides, and the government was going to address the issue by reviewing the Tourism Act.
“We are in discussion about (a) welfare fund, insurance,” he said. “We are sensitive to this because, without the sherpa guides, we can’t promote Nepal’s mountain tourism to the world.”
Some sherpas are not waiting to find out if change comes.
One of them, 36-year-old guide Jenjen Sherpa, said he was planning to move to Japan via a work visa and seek a job there.
“If I die during the mountain guiding, my family cannot get any help from the government… so I decided to leave the job,” said the guide, who provides for his wife, 6-year-old daughter and father.
“If my plan succeeds, I will leave the country soon, for my family.”