Piolets d'Or - Tribute to François Labande
Piolets d'Or 2024 - Awards Ceremony in San Martino di Castrozza, in Trentino (Italy), December 11th.

2024 Awarded ascents & Special mention

The International Jury has chosen to make three Piolets d'Or Awards and one Special Mention. These are, in no particular order :

Tirich Mir (7,708m)

First ascent of The Secret Line on the north face of Tirich Mir (7,708m) in the Hindu Kush, Pakistan, from July 17-23. Traversed the mountain by descending the normal route...

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Jannu (7,710m)

©Alan Rousseau First ascent of Round Trip Ticket (2,700m, M7 AI5+ A0), a partial new route on the north face and northwest ridge of Jannu, Kangchenjunga Himal, from October 7-12. Descended...

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Flat Top (6,100m)

©Matthias Gribi First ascent of Tomorrow Is Another Day (1,400m, ED, 5c A2 WI4 M6) on the north face of Flat Top in the Kishtwar Himalaya, from October 2-6. Descended the...

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2024 Special Mention for Female Mountain…

The Piolets d’Or aims to promote female alpinism by making either a Special Mention to an all-female expedition completing a significant ascent in the Greater Ranges, or to a female...

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©Alessandro-Gruzza

San Martino di Castrozza, 8th-11th Decem…

We are very delighted to announce that the 2024 edition of the “Piolets d’Or” will be held in San Martino di Castrozza, in Trentino, on December 8th to 11th.

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2024 - Jordi Corominas

Jordi is a long-time IFMGA mountain guide living in Benasque on the southern slopes of the Pyrenees. Born in Barcelona, he spent his youth climbing in the Pyrenees and the...

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2024 - Significant ascents

This is a representative list of significant, innovative ascents from most mountain regions of the World. It is not a list of “nominated” ascents for the Piolets d'Or and should...

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Portraits & Tributes

Tribute to Hiraide and Nakajima

©Piotr Drożdż “For me, climbing is about carving out my own path, not following somebody else’s route.”Kazuya Hiraide The west face of K2 (8,611 m) is one of those legendary walls shrouded...

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Tribute to Sergey Nilov and Dmitry Golov…

This summer of 2024 will go down as one of the cruellest for the alpine community. We learned of the disappearance of the famous Japanese climbers Kazuya Hiraide and Kenro...

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Tribute to Archil Badriashvili

©Piotr Drożdż Georgian Archil Badriashvili died on 10 August 2024 at the age of 34. He was with some companions on Shkhelda (4,388 m), not far from Ushba, in the Caucasus...

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Tribute to François Labande

"Mountaineering is a way of life, a philosophy of life, even if I've always refused to consider that in the mountains I was on an island away from society."  The mountaineer Born...

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"Mountaineering is a way of life, a philosophy of life, even if I've always refused to consider that in the mountains I was on an island away from society." 

The mountaineer

Born in Toulon in May 1941, François Labande discovered the Oisans mountains at a very early age, as he recounts in Traces écrites (Éditions Guérin, 2011), probably his most autobiographical work. His parents had a family home in the Guisane valley, and it was there, in the Dauphiné mountains that he would never take his eyes off the land, that he fell in love with this adventurous terrain where the approach are long and the routes always complicated and on a not always perfect rock.

He really learned the techniques of mountaineering with the U.N.C.M. (Union nationale des centres de montagne) at the age of 16, and soon began to tackle the major routes in the Écrins and further afield in the Alps: South Face of the Meije, Écrins Southern Pillar, North-East Face of the Piz Badile, to name but a few.

Gifted in scientific subjects, he enrolled at the prestigious École supérieure d'électricité (better known as Supélec). With his engineering degree in hand, he nevertheless chose to become a mathematics teacher, as he wanted to preserve enough free time to devote to his greatest passion: mountaineering!

He would also discover ski touring much later, soon totalling over a thousand outings. The next logical step was to take up steep slopes and couloirs, what was known at the time as "extreme skiing".

Shared passions

It was this dual scientific and alpine culture that quickly led him to take an interest in topoguides, particularly those relating to his beloved Écrins. As he explains in the introduction to his famous Guide du Haut-Dauphiné, it was in 1946 that the first edition of what became the Écrins counterpart to the famous Guide Vallot devoted to the Mont-Blanc massif was published by Arthaud under the auspices of the G.H.M. Lucien Devies and Maurice Laloue updated it five years later. In 1969, they enlisted the services of the young Labande, introduced by the president of the Marseille Alpine Club, to produce a new edition and then to recast it and divide it into four volumes between 1976 and 1978. Labande recalls: "I went to meet Devies in Paris, we talked at length and he immediately gave me carte blanche with all his confidence".

After the death of Lucien Devies in 1980, the G.H.M. logically entrusted him with total responsibility for three volumes (North, East and South) from 1995 onwards. It was also he who, in 1987, presented a shorter version (in which photographs replaced the historical sketches of the previous editions) in two volumes of Vallot: La Chaîne du Mont-Blanc: Guide Vallot. Sélection de voies.

Other topoguides devoted to ski-mountaineering and hiking were published independently between 1983 and 2007.

Since 1956, the G.H.M. has published an annual edition of Les Annales, with a print run of 1,000 copies, the historic continuation of L'Annuaire (1926-1935) and Alpinisme (1926 to 1955, when it merged with La Montagne). François Labande took over at the end of the 1980s. Still following the same rhythm, they were replaced in 2002 by a new magazine called Cimes (the name Annales will still appear on the cover for the first two editions). Pierre Chapoutot was appointed editor by Yves Peysson. As Hubert Giot (then Chairman of the Group) wrote in the editorial for the first issue: "The adoption of a proper title shows the desire to make this magazine more than just a directory. We hope that this will help it to take its rightful place in an editorial polyphony in which we believe that the G.H.M. is capable of contributing an original voice and approach".

After the accidental death in 2006 of Pierre Chapoutot (caught in an avalanche in the Lauzière massif), Cimes was, as Leslie Fuckso wrote in the 2007 edition, "a bit of a ship without a captain, but the humble sailors that we are on this ship have taken over the helm, driven by the same tireless passion". Hubert Giot and then Stéphane Bauzac would ensure the transition until, under the presidency of Christian Trommsdorff, François Labande took up the torch again with the 2011 edition and ran it until 2015, the date of its last publication to date. To the very end, he will ensure that Cimes remains a collective work, nurtured by the members of the Groupe.

The protector

The other major chapter in his life, although totally linked to his passion for mountaineering, was the protection of high-altitude ecosystems. His love of the mountains was intimately linked to their wildness, which he wanted to preserve at all costs from human abuse.

In 1987, he was one of the founding members of Mountain Wilderness International, alongside Reinhold Messner, Haroun Tazieff, Bernard Amy, Alexis Long and Patrick Gabarrou, among others. The following year, he joined the French branch, becoming Secretary (1988-1994) then Chairman (1995-2002) and finally Honorary Chairman in 2003. For this, he chose to devote himself totally to it, even to the detriment of his other professional activities, taking a leave of absence from the French Ministry of Education.

As soon as the Biella Theses, the founding text of Mountain Wilderness, were drawn up, concrete actions were planned, such as the clean-up of K2 in 1990. He also helped launch the idea of an international Mont Blanc park. As MW's international guarantor, he was also a pioneer in the long process leading to the Parc national des Calanques, writing to Corinne Lepage, then Minister for the Environment, in 1996. He also sat on the board of the Écrins National Park for more than twenty-five years.

A visionary, he has always questioned the development of mountains as much as their over-equipment, from cable cars to via ferrata, the virtues of clean climbing vs. over-bolting, and the cleaning up of rubbish and fixed ropes on the most popular high peaks.

As president of an association promoting local ecology, and after 33 years of civil service and associative activities, he was promoted to Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur in 1999 by the Ministry of the Environment.

The writer

Of his many works, the most inspiring for generations of mountaineers will certainly remain Grandes courses, published by Arthaud (a mountain publisher if ever there was one) in 1980 in the Altitudes collection. With a slightly different concept from Gaston Rébuffat's ‘100 plus belles’, and based on an idea by Lucien Devies himself, it presents 104 selected routes across the Western Alps to evoke "something else inspired by people: personalities, schools, moments in history, techniques, ethical quarrels, literary and artistic projections". In this pivotal period between generations of climbers still anchored in the traditional doxa and those already turned towards new trends (free climbing, fast and light), the form is as effective as the content: for each route, a full-page black and white photo on the left (photography was another of his passions) is mirrored by a drawing of the route, the thematic text and the historical and technical information. Here, we are no longer content with a clinical description, as in the guidebooks, but emotion takes centre stage. 

The 104th is the Voie des Futurs Croulants in the Calanques, not the hardest of all, but surely a tribute to the massif he loved and did so much to protect. And perhaps also because he had the opportunity to climb it at the age of 22 roped up to Lionel Terray, one of his mountain heroes along with Hermann Buhl, "the one that fascinated me the most".

A prolific writer, he also tried his hand at fiction, authoring several novels (the latest in 2020, L'Échelle de l'espoir, is based on his experience with the Tous migrants (We are all migrants) association in Briançon), often inspired by the heights and also by Marseille, where he lived for a long time.

François Labande died on 20 March 2025 in La Salle-les-Alpes. He had been a member of the Groupe de Haute-Montagne since 1981.

 

What are the "Piolets d'Or" ?

A celebration of mountaineering

The purpose of the Piolets d'Or awards is to raise awareness about the year's greatest ascents across the world.  They aim to celebrate the taste for adventure, the bravery and sense of exploration that lie behind the art of climbing in the world's great mountain ranges. The Piolets d'Or draw their inspiration from mountaineering's rich history.  They are a celebration of a sense of partnership and solidarity, of shared experiences, and reward individual or collective achievement.

The Spirit of Modern Alpinism

More than just the recognition of a performance, the Piolets d'Or celebrates passion, spirit and values. The spirit of the Piolets d’Or draws its inspiration from the history of alpinism and the authenticity of true team spirit. The style should take precedence over the conquest of an objective.  Success is no longer about getting to the summit at all costs, employing all possible financial and technical means, (oxygen, fixed ropes, doping products, etc) or large-scale human resources (high-altitude porters or sherpas). The Piolets d’Or event encourages imagination in searching for innovative routes using a maximum of economy of means, making use of experience and respecting man and nature. The Piolets d’Or is attached to making climbing a shared and valued richness all over the world, capable of attracting the best of human ambitions whilst encompassing moral values and edifying behaviour. The Piolets d'Or event is therefore a celebration of an ethical alpinism, rich in emotion.

 

 

Les Piolets d'Or

Piolets d’Or Lifetime Achievement Award

In 2009, the first Lifetime Achievement Piolet d’Or was awarded to Walter Bonatti.  His style of mountaineering perfectly reflected the spirit of thePiolets d’Or.  He became a sort of godfather to those who would receive this award after him. In honour of the man and his spirit, it has been renamed the “Piolet d’Or Lifetime Achievement, Walter Bonatti Award”.

The Career Piolets d'Or was created to reward a career where the spirit has inspired the following generations, in the sense of criteria set down by the convention.
Recipients of the Piolet d'Or Career :
2009 : Walter BONATTI
2010 : Reinhold MESSNER
2011 : Doug SCOTT
2012 : Robert PARAGOT
2013 : Kurt DIEMBERGER
2014 : John ROSKELLEY
2015 : Chris BONINGTON
2016 : Wojciech KURTYKA
2017 : Jeff LOWE
2018 : Andrej ŠTREMFELJ
2019 : Krzysztof WIELICKI
2020 : Catherine DESTIVELLE
2021 : Yasushi YAMANOI
2022 : Silvo KARO
2023 : George LOWE
2024 : Jordi COROMINAS

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