pit in the foreground. Its summit is at the far end of the central rib. Puncak Jaya is one of the more demanding climbs in one version of the
Seven Summits, despite having the lowest elevation. It is held to have the highest technical rating, though not the greatest physical demands of that list's ascents. The standard route to climb the peak from its base camp is up the north face and along the summit ridge, which is all hard rock surface. Despite the large
mine, the area is highly inaccessible to hikers and the general public. The standard route to access base camp as of 2013 is to fly into the nearest major town with an airport,
Timika, and then take a small aircraft over the mountain range and onto an unimproved runway at one of the local villages far down from the peak. It is then typically a five-day hike via the Jungle route to the base camp through very dense rainforest and with regular rainfall, making the approach probably the "most miserable" of the Seven Summits. Rain during most days of the hike inbound and out are not uncommon. Unlike the other Seven Summits, if one sustains an injury on the inbound hike, there is little or no ability to get rescued via helicopter. Anyone injured must evacuate by foot over very difficult and slippery terrain. The descent from the peak's base camp can take three to four days. Anecdotally, it appears most injuries occur during the descent due to a combination of exhaustion and difficulty controlling hiking speed on the wet and slippery terrain. An additional complication is relatively common work strikes by the climbing porters that accompany most expeditions, occasionally halting their work to demand (and usually receive) higher pay before agreeing to continue. The one-day summit bid is technically challenging for those with little rock climbing experience, and it can be quite cold with temperatures at or below freezing near the summit. Patches of snow sometimes appear on the route up or on the ropes of the
Tyrolean traverse just below the summit.
Climbing history ,
Frits Wissel and
Jean Jacques Dozy during the
Carstensz expedition in 1936. In 1936, the Dutch
Carstensz expedition, unable to establish definitively which of the three summits was the highest, attempted to climb each.
Anton Colijn,
Jean Jacques Dozy, and
Frits Wissel reached both the glacier-covered East Carstensz and Ngga Pulu summits on December 5, but, due to bad weather, failed in their attempts to climb the bare Carstensz Pyramid. Because of extensive snow melt, Ngga Pulu has become a subsidiary peak, but it has been estimated that in 1936 (when glaciers still covered of the mountain; see map) Ngga Pulu was indeed the highest summit, reaching over . The now-highest Carstensz Pyramid summit was not climbed until 1962, by an expedition led by the Austrian mountaineer
Heinrich Harrer, New Zealand mountaineer
Philip Temple, Australian rock climber Russell Kippax, and Dutch patrol officer Albertus (Bert) Huizenga. Temple had previously led an expedition into the area and pioneered the access route to the mountains. When Indonesia took control of the province in 1963, the peak was renamed Poentja' Soekarno (Simplified
Indonesian: Puncak Sukarno) or Sukarno Peak, after the then-
President of Indonesia Sukarno; later this was changed to Puncak Jaya due to the subsequent
de-Sukarnoization.
Puncak means peak or mountain and
Jaya means 'victory', 'victorious', or 'glorious'. The name Carstensz Pyramid is still used among
mountaineers.
Access Access to the peak requires a government permit. The mountain was closed to tourists and climbers between 1995 and 2005. As of 2006, access is possible through various adventure tourism agencies. Despite being among the lowest of the Seven Summits, Puncak Jaya is considered to be a technically difficult climb, requiring extensive planning, acclimatisation, mountaineering skills, and support services, due to its remoteness and sheer limestone faces. Located in an isolated area of central Papua, there are no nearby facilities, and climbers have the option to take a helicopter to the base camp and reach the summit within three to four days, or spend an additional four to five days to trek to base camp from the nearest town, Sugapa.
Incidents In 2016, Erik Airlangga died of hypothermia while attempting the peak after getting caught in extreme weather. In 2017, Ahmad Hadi died of hypoxemia while climbing the peak. In the 2024 climbing season, two climbers died while attempting the summit. The first died of a suspected heart attack on 29 September. The second climber, Chinese mountaineer Dong Fei died of a fall while on the descent. In 2025, Lilie Wijayati Poegiono and Elsa Laksono died of hypothermia while descending the summit after being trapped in extreme weather. ==See also==