Posted at 8:49 a.m., Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Olympics: China plans highway to Mt. Everest for torch
By Scott McDonald
Associated Press
Construction of the road, budgeted at $19.7 million would turn a 67-mile rough path from the foot of the mountain to a base camp at 17,060 feet "into a blacktop highway fenced by undulating guardrails," the Xinhua News Agency said.
Xinhua said construction, which would start next week, would take about four months. The new highway would become a major route for tourists and mountaineers, it said.
An official from the Secretariat of the Tibetan government, who declined to give his name, confirmed the project was planned, but refused to give any details. Tibet and Nepal are the most commonly used routes up the mountain.
In April, organizers for the Beijing Summer Olympics announced ambitious plans for the longest torch relay in Olympic history an 85,000-mile, 130-day route that would cross five continents and reach the 29,035-foot summit of Everest.
Taking the Olympic torch to the top of the mountain, seen by some as a way for Beijing to underscore its claims to Tibet, is expected to be one of the relay's highlights.
China says it has ruled Tibet for centuries, although many Tibetans say their homeland was essentially an independent state for most of that time. Chinese communist troops occupied Tibet in 1951, and Beijing continues to rule the region with a heavy hand.
The day before the route of the torch relay was announced by the Beijing organizers of the Olympics, five Americans unfurled banners at a base camp calling for an independent Tibet.
The five, from the Students for a Free Tibet group, were briefly held and then expelled from China.
Officials from the Beijing organizing committee did not immediately return phone calls asking for comment.
Ed Viesturs, one of the most accomplished American climbers, said he thought a paved road, as opposed to the current dirt one, might make access to base camp easier for tour groups, but he did not think it would affect climbers significantly.
"It's not going to matter to a climber whether it's paved or not," he said. "Big deal."
Viesturs, who has summitted Everest six times, noted that no matter how well maintained the road is, climbers must ascend slowly to give them time to acclimatize to the steadily dropping oxygen levels.
Although he acknowledged that the bumpy, dusty ride up to base camp on the north face of the mountain helps to make "you feel like you're in the middle of nowhere," he was reluctant to criticize the plan.
"I can't make a decision to say it's good for me to be alone. That's hypocritical," Viesturs said. "I know it would be nice to have less people there, but that's selfish."
Viesturs added that climbers who prefer trekking to base camp already choose to approach the mountain from the Nepalese side, where there is no road.
Mark Bain, the director of Cornell University's Center for the Environment, said the environmental impact of new roads in relatively pristine areas is more severe than in places where similar infrastructure already exists.
Roads, in general, are a minor source of pollutants, he said, like tire dust, oil and the pavement itself.
The most significant concerns in such projects, however, is that they create "the opportunity for further development," Bain said, like the need for a parking lot at the end of the road and then perhaps a restaurant.
A local climbing official praised the plan.
"It is a good thing for the local development and the local people, because more tourists and mountain climbers will be attracted to the region," said Zhang Mingxing, general-secretary of the Tibetan Mountaineering Association.
"The road now is a very shabby. People have to spend one day to get the base from the foot of the mountain. Mountain climbers will be able to save their energy for climbing," Zhang said.
New Zealand double amputee Mark Inglis, who scaled Everest last year, described the Chinese plan as "pretty ambitious," but declined to comment further.
Inglis was enmeshed in controversy after being among a group of climbers that passed English climber David Sharp as he lay dying of exposure and lack of oxygen just below the summit of Everest on May 15, 2006.
Associated Press writers Rohan Sullivan in Sydney, Australia, and Sara DiLorenzo in New York contributed to this report.