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Last Updated:April 24, 2026, 01:47 IST
Traditionally, the route to Camp 1 is established by the Nepali New Year (mid-April), but the 2026 season is already weeks behind schedule

The current strategy is a tense waiting game, with teams hoping the block will either melt or fall naturally within the coming days. (Representational image/AP)
The 2026 spring climbing season on Mount Everest has hit a precarious standstill as a massive, unstable block of glacial ice, known as a serac, has obstructed the primary route through the Khumbu Icefall. Standing approximately 30 metres (100 feet) tall, the hanging ice wall is positioned just below Camp 1, effectively cutting off access to the world’s highest peak during the most critical window for acclimatisation and route preparation.
The ‘Icefall Doctors’ Face a Deadly Impasse
The Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee (SPCC), which employs the specialised team of Sherpas known as “Icefall Doctors", has halted all route-fixing work due to the extreme risk of collapse. These experts, responsible for installing the network of ropes and ladders that allow hundreds of climbers to navigate the treacherous glacier, have searched for an alternative path around the obstacle but found none that meet safety standards.
According to officials on the ground, the serac is perched at a volatile angle, threatening to bury anyone beneath it in millions of tonnes of ice. The current strategy is a tense waiting game, with teams hoping the block will either melt or fall naturally within the coming days. Until then, the route remains officially closed to both workers and the hundreds of international climbers currently gathering at Base Camp.
Mounting Delays and Crowding Concerns
The timing of the blockage is particularly problematic. Traditionally, the route to Camp 1 is established by the Nepali New Year (mid-April), but the 2026 season is already weeks behind schedule. This delay creates a logistical “bottleneck" that could have deadly consequences later in May. If the route opens late, a record number of permit holders will be forced to attempt the summit within a much narrower weather window, significantly increasing the likelihood of the dangerous high-altitude “traffic jams" that have plagued the mountain in recent years.
The Risks of the Khumbu Icefall
The Khumbu Icefall is widely considered the most dangerous section of the South Col route. The glacier moves up to 1.2 metres per day, causing crevasses to open and ice towers to collapse without warning. The current situation echoes past tragedies, including the 2014 serac collapse that killed 16 Sherpas.
To mitigate the delay, some expedition leaders have proposed using helicopters to ferry heavy equipment to Camp 2, though this remains a controversial and expensive alternative. For the approximately 3,500 people currently inhabiting Everest Base Camp, the focus remains squarely on the hanging wall of ice, which holds the fate of the 2026 season in the balance.
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First Published:
April 24, 2026, 01:47 IST
News world Everest Climbing Season Hits 100-Ft-High Speed Bump: Massive Ice Wall Blocks Route To Summit
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