The Guardian (USA)

Mount Everest: Nepal and China prepare to reveal new height after Covid delay

- Helen Davidson

Some time in the near future – after a wait of a decade – the world will learn the new height of Mount Everest.

China and Nepal have teamed up to measure the world’s highest mountain which straddles their border and, under a 2019 memorandum of understand­ing, they must announce their findings together. The announceme­nt was reportedly delayed because of the pandemic.

Nepal sent its own team to the summit in 2019, while China’s expedition occurred in May this year.

The two countries have historical­ly disagreed on the official height but in 2010 agreed to settle their difference­s.

“The Chinese side … accepted Nepal’s claim that the snow height of Mount Everest is 8,848 metres, while the Nepali side recognised the Chinese claim that the rock height of the mountain is 8,844.43 metres,” China’s foreign ministry said at the time.

All measuremen­ts to this day have been conducted by US, European or Indian surveyors, rather than the countries where Everest sits.

Navin Manandhar, who helped develop the methodolog­y for re-measuremen­t, told the Nepali Times: “This body of work is a matter of pride for Nepal, but is also a huge undertakin­g and with the whole world keenly waiting for the result, it has not been easy.”

The height of Everest was first declared to be 8,840m by the Great Trigonomet­ric Survey (GTS) of India in 1856. It has fluctuated over time, depending on the surveyor and whether the measuremen­t is taken at the highest rock point or the highest snow point, which is subject to change.

Christophe­r Pearson of the University of Otago in New Zealand told the Nepali Times: “The height of Everest is constantly changing due to tectonic activity, of which the 2015 Gorkha earthquake is only the most recent contributi­on.”

According to the newspaper, the two sides also use different sea-level points as a reference for their measuremen­ts. China uses the Yellow sea while Nepal’s location is closer to the Bay of Bengal coast.

 ??  ?? China and Nepal agreed in 2010 to settle their difference­s on how to measure Mount Everest. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images
China and Nepal agreed in 2010 to settle their difference­s on how to measure Mount Everest. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States