For most people, hearing the name Mount Everest brings to mind images of a pristine snow capped peak, perhaps with a brave climber standing atop it with an arm raised in triumph. After all, this person must have reached the pinnacle of human achievement by ascending the worlds highest mountain.
Does it get any better than that?
This idyllic view of Everest is slowly being erased, however, as stories about the mountains harsh realities make the rounds on social media. Its already widely understood that not everyone who tries to make it to the top of the world makes it back down. But thats only the beginning of the drama.
Located between Nepal and Tibet, Mount Everest is the worlds tallest peak. This majestic mountain sits at 29,029 feet above sea level. Oxygen is so thin at the top that its called the death zone. This is where even the most experienced climbers succumb to their bodies breaking down and for some, that means extreme sickness or even death.
Since the 1900s, more than 300 people have died trying to scale the icy terrain of Everest. Per an Insider report, 2023 is shaping up to be a particularly deadly year, with 12 climbers pronounced dead already and 5 still missing. Two factors contributing to these high rates of fatality are altitude sickness and overcrowding on the mountain.
Westend61. Getty Images.
Despite its risks, climbing Mount Everest has become more popular than ever blame it on social media, boredom, or just people inherently wanting to one-up each other. No matter the reason, the increased interest in scaling the worlds highest peak is now so extreme that new guidelines were instituted for this year.
These rules include stipulations prohibiting solo climbers (everyone must have a trained sherpa). All climbers must have successfully climbed a peak at least 7,000 feet high previously. People over 75, double amputees, and blind persons are all prohibited from climbing.
Its all part of an effort to stop overcrowding. Filmmaker and director Jennifer Peedom told Insider, It is extremely overcrowded now and just getting more and more every year.
The publication noted that Nepal issued a record 463 permits to people who want to climb Mount Everest during the 2023 season, meaning about 900 people will jostle to reach the summit this year alone. Things get dicey in May when wind dies down and temperatures warm. This is when theres a literal line up the mountain, with climbers pushing their way to the top.
Many people are aware of the fact that Everest is littered with dead bodies because its too costly and dangerous to remove them. But what fewer observers realize is that the mountain is also littered with trash. And theres a lot of it.
A video of the garbage-strewn base camp went viral on Instagram in mid-May, just ahead of the 70th anniversary of Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgays ascending Everest for the first time on May 29, 1953. The duo is believed to be the first to reach the mountains peak.
Jam Press Vid/@tenzi_sherpa1999
The post came from mountain guide Tenzi Sherpa, who has been guiding climbers to the summit since 2019. The dirtiest camp I have ever seen, he wrote in the caption .
I think the government should make strict rules for those who leave trash [on Mount Everest], and a more effective cleaning campaign project should be held, the guide told Newsweek about his video post.
As concerning as the trash piles are among the white snow, the sherpas video isnt even the strangest story to come from Everest this season. That title belongs to the tale of a guide who allegedly saved a dying climbers life only to have the man supposedly block him later on social media.
The story goes that Malaysian climber Ravichandran, who goes by the name Ravichandran Everest or Ravi, was attempting to scale Everest when he succumbed to altitude sickness and collapsed not far from the summit. Video footage shows Gelje Sherpa, who had been climbing with a different client when he came upon the body, wrapping a mattress around the man and strapping the climber onto his back. He abandoned his own clients summit push to hike the man down to safety.
Footage of the incident was shared by Twitter user Visakan Veerasamy. The video went viral and has been watched more than 1.3 million times. there's an incredible story going on in the mountaineering community rn. there's a Malaysian climber who was at death's door, and was rescued by a sherpa who risked his own life to carry his lifeless body on his back for 6 hours. The climber then blocked the sherpa on Instagram https://t.co/AJW70vJ3Kr
Visakan Veerasamy (@visakanv) June 4, 2023
Gelje shared on Instagram on May 20: You may all be wondering where is the summit photo? Unfortunately no summit yet. At the Balcony during our summit push around 8,300m I saw someone in danger.
A man who needed rescuing and no one else was helping. I made the decision to cancel our clients summit push so that I could bring him down to safety before he died up there alone. I carried him myself all the way down to Camp 4 where a rescue team helped from then on. I will be back up the mountain soon after regaining energy from a huge task but I am so happy to say he is alive and recovering in hospital.
But just after this incredible story came to light, Ravi allegedly blocked Gelje on social media and refused to acknowledge his assistance. He posted about the incident several days later after getting a lot of negative attention on social media.
Sherpas are people who are so committed and dedicated to their clients especially coming from 14 Peaks Expedition Co. & The Seven Summit Expedition Co. They never leave you behind. I experienced it this year. When descending from [the] summit, I had difficulty. Tashi heard that I [was] in trouble, he organised the rescue team (Mingma Tendi, Gelje Sherpa, Nima Dorchi, Nima Tashi, Dawa Sherpa and Dipen Bhote). They are high altitude sherpas who make lots of sacrifices for their clients. They brought me to 7300 meter[s] for Heli Pick-up for a quick Heli flight to Hospital. Sherpas are important in my 8000 meter expeditions, he wrote.
Gelje Sherpa responded by saying in the comments, Thank you [clasped hands emoji] hope you are recovering well.
Daring rescues aside, theres no denying that climbing Mount Everest has changed a lot in the past seven decades since it began. Anyone seeking to reach the top of the world today should first know what theyre in for.
Theres sort of this idea that theres only one mountain that really matters in the kind of Western, popular imagination, Peedom told Business Insider. Shes climbed the mountain four times, but said the modern experience is nothing compared to what it used to be.
There seems to be a disaster mystique around Everest that seems to only serve to heighten the allure of the place, she told the publication. It is extremely overcrowded now and just getting more and more every year.
The government has vowed to stop businesses recruiting foreign workers instead of training people already in the UK.
Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper criticised the current “relaxed free market approach”, which she says has led net migration to quadruple over the past four years.
“A big driver… has been that overseas recruitment has shot up in a series of areas where training has fallen,” she said.
“This has led to a relaxed free market approach for businesses to just be able to recruit from overseas instead of training in the UK.”
She said there “has to be more requirements” that force firms to show they are making recruitment efforts domestically.
Ms Cooper said the government is “drawing up further measures” that will particularly target industries such as IT, construction, and engineering where “for far too long we have been recruiting from abroad”.
The new Border Security Asylum and Immigration Bill – revealed last week – will link the immigration system to bodies like Skills England and others that are involved in workforce planning, Ms Cooper said.
She said the government will keep the skilled migrant worker salary threshold at £38,700 and it has removed the 20% wage discount for non-EU foreign workers brought in by the Conservatives in 2019.
There will also be continued restrictions on both foreign graduate students and social care workers bringing family members, she added.
The home secretary’s comments come after the Office for National Statistics (ONS) published predictions that the UK population will grow by five million people in 10 years – driven mainly by migration.
Speaking to Sir Trevor afterwards, shadow trade and business secretary Andrew Griffiths said: “Well, we’ve been very clear. The Conservative Party is under new management. Immigration was too high. There were many, many, many, many failings in that immigration system in that period of time.”
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Immigration driving up UK population
No to universal digital ID cards
In the Sunday Telegraph, shadow home secretary Chris Philp accused the government of repealing parts of their Illegal Migration Act 2023 that make it almost impossible for people who arrive in small boats to apply for citizenship.
He also suggested the government is repealing the Conservatives’ measure of treating those who refuse to undergo scientific age checking as adults.
A Home Office spokesperson said: “The Illegal Migration Act has largely not been commenced (including this measure on age assessments); nor will it be under this government’s policy.
“We have robust processes in place to verify and assess an individual’s age where there is doubt, including the National Age Assessment Board, and have maintained the provisions on scientific assessments from the Nationality & Borders Act 2022.”
Asked about former prime minister Sir Tony Blair’s claims that digital ID cards would help ease pressures on immigration, Ms Cooper did not endorse them.
Instead, she said: “Non-UK citizens already have to have biometric resident permits, but they’re hardly ever checked.”
On trade, Ms Cooper reiterated Labour’s stance that the UK will not re-enter the Customs Union, European Single Market, or restore freedom of movement.
“We’ll look at ways to reduce friction, but we’re not returning to a Customs Union. You do it within a framework that we’re outside the EU and we’re not returning. We need to move on.”
As we enter the second month of 2025, Honda is inching closer to commencing BEV production at its long-standing US plant in Marysville, Ohio, later this year. That $1 billion transition will begin with the assembly of the recently confirmed Acura RSX EV, followed by the first two models in Honda’s 0 Series lineup. Before that happened, however, Honda gave an exclusive tour of its new EV Hub in Ohio, which included an innovative new approach to modular vehicle assembly, massive mega press machines, and an insightful look into the positive impact Honda has established amongst the residents of The Buckeye State. You can view my whole tour expeirience in the video below.
While Honda is a global name synonymous with engines and mobility, it is still carving out its own legacy in the BEV segment. That process began with two initial all-electric models – the Honda Prologue and the Acura ZDX, both of which I’ve had the opportunity to test drive and share my impressions.
While those two models put some of Honda’s skin in the game, they are arguably only a fraction of Honda’s true design DNA, which it has since taken into its own hands looking forward. That future includes the Honda 0 Series, which was initially announced at CES 2024 as a “back to zero” mentality for the Japanese automaker.
The 0 Series began with two BEV concepts called the “Saloon” and “Space Hub,” which have since evolved in the Honda 0 Saloon and SUV prototypes, which debuted at CES a year later and were on display at Honda’s EV Hub in Marysville, Ohio this past week.
Marysville, home to Honda’s first and longest-running US production facility, will soon house BEV production of the two models mentioned above. First, however, Honda will begin assembling an all-electric Acura SUV developed from the Performance EV Concept, which we recently learned will be called the RSX.
Honda is still putting the finishing touches on a $1 billion overhaul of its new EV Hub in Ohio but invited a group of media out to tour multiple facilities and see where the first true Honda and Acura-built BEVs will be assembled, beginning later this year.
I documented my visit in a video below, but will break it down in words for you as well.
Honda is taking a failsafe approach to production
As you may or may not know, the Honda EV Hub is part of a $1 billion+ investment from the Japanese automaker to retool its existing facilities in Ohio to produce electric vehicles. That includes reimagining three existing plants: the Marysville Auto Plant (MAP), East Liberty Auto Plant (ELP), and the Anna Engine Plant (AEP).
During my EV Hub visit, we started at the Marysville Auto Plant, which originally opened in 1979 and has been building Honda cars since 1982, to see the progress the company has made in revamping a 40+ year old facility for the all-electric age while continuing to build ICE and plug-in vehicles.
What we saw was a unique approach to modern-day vehicle assembly, in which Honda will soon be able to build ICE, hybrid-electric, and BEVs on the same production line. Furthermore, the automaker can ramp up or down any specific vehicle configuration depending on customer demand. Senior vice president, Honda Development & Manufacturing of America, LLC, Bob Schwyn spoke to the media before joining us on the tour of Marysville:
The Honda EV Hub provides Honda with the flexibility to produce ICE, hybrid-electric and EV models on the same production lines so we can quickly respond to shifting customer needs and market conditions. Beyond adding the capability to produce EVs, we completely reimagined our approach to manufacturing, transforming the Honda production environment with more human-friendly processes and sustainable manufacturing practices.
As you’ll see in my video coverage, Honda was in the process of building a slew of Accords, which was interesting in its own right, but what was more exciting was the empty space at the Marysville section of the EV Hub, where Honda will soon begin assembling its battery platforms before integrating them into vehicles on those very same assembly lines, beginning with the Acura RSX.
As you can see in the image below, Honda has cleared out a massive amount of space for dedicated BEV component assembly, which required it to remove an entire existing build line and get creative about where to re-implement other manufacturing components in different parts of the plant – all while continuing to build non-BEV models.
Per the Honda team, the EV Hub will hire 300 new employees to specifically handle battery pack assembly at Marysville. The battery cases for those packs are built at Honda’s Anna Engine Plant, which I also got to visit and have detailed below. Those manufactured cases are then transported to Marysville, where trained Honda “Associates” will work alongside electric guided vehicles (EGVs) and robots to assemble Honda’s first-ever propriety EV platform.
Honda calls the process “Parallel module manufacturing,” which consists of a network of assembly cells performing assembly tasks in a multi-lateral manner in which if one cell is slow or completely down for some reason, production can continue.
Per Honda, the first batch of battery pack assembly cells have been installed at Marysville with a second batch to follow in three months. That will put Honda at its targeted launch volume of which it can scale from there depending on demand.
Honda’s megacast arsenal bolsters EV Hub’s future
After our walkthrough around Marysville, we took a bus ride to Anna, Ohio, home to Honda’s Anna Engine Plant – another key piece to its EV Hub. Despite its name, Honda does not just build engines in Anna. Yes, it still very much does, but AEP is also the new home to vital machinery in Honda’s BEV manufacturing.
Honda has installed five of its six planned 6,000-ton megacasting machines at AEP, which will die-cast the EV battery cases mentioned above and seen in the images below. The massive die-cast machines, each capable of 300 tons of pressure during a trim press, will be operated in pairs by Honda as soon as the last machine has been installed.
In order to move the megacasting machines into the Anna Engine Plant, Honda had to widen its plant door. Then, it installed machines one through four, followed by number six, which just started operations a couple of weeks ago. Machine five, which would have been in the way if it hadn’t been installed last, will be arriving soon with plenty of time before Acura RSX production begins.
For me personally, it was awesome to visit AEP and see the megacasting in action because I got to see the same machine at Honda’s R&D center in Tochigi, Japan, this past fall. There, I was told that six more of those megacasting machines would be installed at the EV hub in Ohio.
Just months later, Honda is nearly complete with the installation process, and the three pairs will begin pressing the front and rear battery casings. While I did see the megacast machine in action in Japan, it was at a distance. During my visit to the EV Hub, however, Honda took us onto one of the machines where we could watch an EV battery case cast and trimmed up close. I documented it in my video below for you!
Another assembly technique I learned about in Tochigi but got to see in person at the Anna Engine Plant was Honda’s friction stir welding process. This innovative method produced high-strength welds to combine the two halves of the battery case and the water jacket (seen below) while reducing the amount of energy used and heat impact on the aluminum material.
This technique and Honda’s overall EV Hub renovation are part of a larger three-pronged strategy called “Triple Action to Zero.” Its goal is to achieve zero environmental impact by 2050 through carbon neutrality, clean energy, and resource circulation. That entails all zero-emission sales by 2040.
Honda is building EVs in the US the right way
After my visit to Marysville and Anna, walking the assembly lines and chatting with Honda Associates from all levels of the company, I realized that a vestige of the American dream is still present in Ohio. Marysville and Anna are blue-collar areas, and those cities have continued to evolve thanks to Honda’s decision to plant roots on US soil over 40 years ago.
Many of the people I encountered during my trip have been with the company for longer than I have been on this Earth, some second generation, who grew up watching their parent grow alongside the company and its Ohio footprint.
While much of Honda’s US production history is a bit oily and dusty due to engines and combustion, the EV Hub provides a new era on par with Honda’s overall “back to zero” startup mentality. I was genuinely impressed by Honda’s ability to pivot, rethink, and repurpose its existing facilities to support the addition of BEV production.
Furthermore, the decision to implement those assemblies on the same line as Honda’s ICE and plug-in vehicles sounds like a pipe dream on paper, but in person, the company appears to have pulled it off. But it took everyone in Marysville, East Liberty, and Anna to get there. Honda will continue to rely on those Associates as it approaches the day when its first bespoke BEV on its very own platform rolls off that Marysville assembly line.
With the current political climate and EV education and understanding remaining huge hurdles for Americans and plenty of the public servants who help govern them, the future of BEV production is murky. That’s scary, given our tremendous progress in the past decade.
However, whether people are buying ICE cars, hybrids, PHEVs, or BEVs years from now, Honda has teed itself up to adapt and rise to the challenge (something the company prides itself on) with its EV Hub.
I’ve now learned the where, the when, and the how of BEV production at the Honda EV Hub, but now I’m ready for the what. From what I’ve been told, the 0 Series Saloon and SUV prototypes are “very close” to the final production design, but the Acura RSX remains a bit of a mystery aside from one camouflaged image.
I expect to learn more soon as that SUV will kick off Honda’s EV Hub production in late 2025. Perhaps I can take another trip to Ohio and see it built before driving one myself. While we await that milestone, you can check out my video touring the Marysville and Anna facilities at Honda’s EV Hub below:
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Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has shrugged off being called a “snivelling cretin” by Elon Musk – and has vowed to continue “calling him out”.
Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Sir Ed said he has been “in politics long enough to know that there are insults made”, adding that he is “sometimes not always complimentary about people like Elon Musk”.
Mr Musk, the world’s richest man, has made several comments about UK politics since the election of the Labour government last July and widespread rioting triggered by misinformation around the killing of three young girls in Southport soon after.
Last month, Sir Ed posted on X: “People have had enough of Elon Musk interfering with our country’s democracy when he clearly knows nothing about Britain.
“It’s time to summon the US ambassador to ask why an incoming US official is suggesting the UK government should be overthrown.”
Mr Musk replied: “What exactly do I fail to understand about your failure to stop the mass rape of little girls in Britain, you sniveling cretin?”
Speaking to Sir Trevor on Sky News, Sir Ed said the “real issue of substance is Elon Musk said that the British government elected by the British people just a few months ago should be overthrown”.
He said that while he does not agree with many of President Donald Trump’s views, the UK should still try to work with the US.
On Mr Musk, he added: “It’s a real matter of concern. We need to call him out.”
Sir Ed described him as an “overpowerful billionaire tech magnate”, “best friend of the president of the United States”, and “camped out in Trump’s Oval Office”.
Mr Musk has been appointed as head of Mr Trump’s newly-created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
While not a government body – it has been instructed to cut bureaucracy and budgets across the federal government.