Indian Army Team To Scale Mt. Everest, Will Return With 4000 Kg Garbage

Supported by

A 30-member Indian Army mountaineering team is preparing to scale the Mount Everest to mark 50 years of ascent of the world’s highest mountain peak by India. But this time the army men have an additional mission – to cleanse the slopes and the peak off non-biodegradable waste left by generation of mountain climbers.

The world’s most iconic mountain is also a notorious trash heap. On Mount Everest, tents, sleeping bags, tins, packets, oxygen cylinders and even the corpses of climbers who never made it down remain.

The Indian Army team aims to bring at least 4,000 kg of waste from the high-altitude camps down to the base camp, and then the other volunteers will take over the drive to clean the Himalayas.

Courtesy: Daily Mail

#PoweredByYou We bring you news and stories that are worth your attention! Stories that are relevant, reliable, contextual and unbiased. If you read us, watch us, and like what we do, then show us some love! Good journalism is expensive to produce and we have come this far only with your support. Keep encouraging independent media organisations and independent journalists. We always want to remain answerable to you and not to anyone else.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured

Amplified by

P&G Shiksha

P&G Shiksha Turns 20 And These Stories Say It All

Amplified by

Isha Foundation

Sadhguru’s Meditation App ‘Miracle of Mind’ Hits 1 Million Downloads in 15 Hours, Surpassing ChatGPT’s Early Growth

Recent Stories

Uttarakhand: ₹2.8 Cr Bailey Bridge Collapses Days Before Completion in Chamoli; PWD Engineers Suspended for Negligence

Madras HC Landmark Verdict: ‘Same-Sex Couples Can Legally Form Their Own Families’

From RTO Inspector to ISRO Scientist: Meet Sujata Madke, First Woman from Thane, Maharashtra to Join the Space Agency

Contributors

Writer : 
Editor : 
Creatives :