Height of Mount Qomolangma declared 8848.86 meters

BEIJING: China and Nepal jointly announced the new height of Mount Qomolangma as 8848.86 meters on Tuesday, ending years of debate over the three-meter difference that the two neighbors have on the world’s highest peak.
Announcing the new height of Mount Qomolangma carries the significance of connecting the past and building the future, said Chinese President Xi Jinping, hailing it as signaling the high level development of the bilateral relationship.
President Xi and his Nepalese counterpart Bidya Devi Bhandari exchanged letters to jointly announce the height of Mount Qomolangma.
Xi noted that Mount Qomolangma is an important symbol of friendship between the two countries from generation to generation. The two countries established the world’s highest peak as the boundary peak between China and Nepal and the “China-Nepal friendship peak.”
China is also ready to work with Nepal to actively promote ecological and environmental protection and scientific research cooperation on Mount Qomolangma, and protect the common treasure and homeland of the two peoples, Xi vowed.
Xi stressed that this year marks the 65th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between China and Nepal. Thanks to the concerted efforts of both sides, political mutual trust between the two countries has been increasingly enhanced, the cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative has been making steady progress, and the trans-Himalayan connectivity network is turning from a vision into a reality. The previous calculation by Chinese researchers from a 2005 survey stands at 8,844 meters, while Nepal said it was a little taller, at 8,847 meters.
The three-meter gap, to be closed in the upcoming announcement, was caused by the difference in measuring methods, with China calculating the “rock height” underneath the snow, while Nepal measured the “snow height” which included the snowcap.
Earthquakes that took place in the nearby region have also affected the height of the mountain, experts noted. But the extent of the impact the 2015 Nepalese earthquake had on the mountain’s height, with its epicenter 200 kilometers away, has not been verified in the international community.
Reaching a consensus on the issue reflects the two countries’ mutual respect and willingness to extend cooperation by promoting information sharing, observers noted on Monday. Mount Qomolangma can be seen as a symbol of friendship between the two countries. Rather than surveying the height separately, China and Nepal agreed on a unified result, similar to the mountain’s area division.
Analysts noted that the result could also give great value to the study of the Earth’s geodynamic plate motion. Data such as peak snow depth, weather and wind speed will provide first-hand information for research on glacier monitoring and ecological environment protection.
The Chinese measurement team made another successful journey to the peak of Mount Qomolangma on May 27, following a joint statement signed in 2019 by the two countries saying they would conduct scientific research and reach a consensus on the stature of the mountain during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Nepal’s capital city Kathmandu.
– The Daily Mail-Global Times News exchange item