Trek to EBC on International Women's Day With a Climate Call

Published Date
Nepalese Women_EBC
Published Date

Join 30 remarkable Nepalese women as they trek to Everest Base Camp on International Women's Day to raise awareness about climate change.

⏱ 2 min read
♻ Suggest your friend

On International Women's Day on March 08, an assembly of 30 women from various corners of Nepal—including a beauty queen, distinguished politicians, and dedicated activists—will gather at the base camp of the illustrious Mount Everest with a collective purpose to illuminate the urgent matter of the melting Himalayan glaciers, attributable to the relentless forces of climate change and its consequential adverse effects on indigenous populations. The event is officially launched in Kathmandu by Sath Sathai, an organization that stands at the forefront of advocating for both climate cognizance and the empowerment of women. 

The expedition from Kathmandu to the threshold of Everest is a profound declarative act set against the narrative of our planet’s climatic transformation. Prajeeta Karki, who leads Sathi Sathai as president, voices the ambition of calling to worldwide attention the critical pace at which climate change is affecting the Everest environs. 

This timely trek sheds light on grave findings by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), which paints a sobering landscape: no fewer than 79 glaciers in Mount Everest's vicinity have diminished by unprecedented measurements exceeding 100 meters over the past sixty years. The procession aims to foster dialogue with communities both at mountain altitudes and downstream locales about consequential effects stemming from glacial recession — these range from diminishing river meltwaters to imperiled livelihoods dependent upon these aquatic resources. 

The congregation at Kalapatthar during International Women's Day transcends mere symbolism; it epitomizes an emphatic appeal for immediate action to mitigate climate change effects in the Himalayas. By amalgamating women across diverse professional domains, their march stresses the critical influence women wield concerning climate mitigation and underscores the imperative need for investment in women's initiatives as a catalyst to achieve progressive sustainable strategies. 

As this event garners international attention, it demonstrates Himalayan women championing essential leadership roles alongside persistent advocacy—a call for widespread collaboration in confronting climate adversities globally.

The promenade toward Everest Base Camp eloquently illustrates our natural endowments' susceptibility to climatic shifts and underscores an imperative call for communal preservation efforts. These efforts are vital for protecting grand wonders for posterity. It represents unity's potency, and resilience's vigor, and signals an era where women lead from the forefront in contending against ecological compromises. 

As they ascend towards Everest’s formidable entity, they are not merely ascending a mountain—they carry forth ambitions and aspirations emblematic of communities globally affected by climatic deviations—signaling imperative calls for hopefulness and concrete steps towards amelioration.