Is it a plane or a satellite? No, it’s a Chinese paraglider at 8000 m above earth, frozen with no oxygen and still surviving

Peng Yujiang, a Chinese paraglider, faced a dangerous situation in the Qilian Mountains. He was caught in a cloud updraft. This lifted him to a very high altitude. Peng battled freezing temperatures and low oxygen. He managed to control his glider...

TIL Creatives

Chinese paraglider at 8000 m above earth

Peng Yujiang, a seasoned Chinese paraglider, on May 24, 2025, found himself at the center of a harrowing and extraordinary survival story—one that has captivated China’s adventure sports community and drawn comparisons to some of the most extreme feats in paragliding history.

Peng, who has been paragliding since at least 2021 according to his WeChat posts, launched from the Qilian Mountains in northwestern China, a region known for its government-backed paragliding base and as host of the Coupe Icare China. What was intended as a routine ground-based training session quickly turned perilous. About 20 minutes after takeoff, Peng was caught in a rare and dangerous meteorological phenomenon known as “cloud suck”—a powerful updraft within a cumulonimbus cloud that can rapidly pull gliders thousands of meters upward.

Data from Peng’s GPS tracker, later shared on social media, revealed he was lifted to a staggering altitude of 8,598 meters (28,200 feet)—just shy of the cruising altitude of commercial jetliners and perilously close to the world record for unassisted paragliding altitude. The ascent rate peaked at 9.7 meters per second (35 km/h), and temperatures plummeted to minus 40 degrees Celsius. Footage from Peng’s own camera shows him coated in ice, without supplemental oxygen, struggling to communicate via radio as his hands froze.


At such altitudes, oxygen levels are dangerously low and the risk of hypoxia, frostbite, and unconsciousness is extreme. Remarkably, Peng managed to stay conscious and maintain control for over an hour, eventually landing safely 33 kilometers from his launch site. “I felt the lack of oxygen. My hands were frozen outside. I kept trying to talk on the radio,” Peng recounted in a Douyin video posted after his flight.

His ordeal echoes that of German paraglider Ewa Wiśnierska, who survived a similar incident in 2007 after being lifted to 9,946 meters in Australia and losing consciousness for nearly 40 minutes. Both stories highlight the unpredictable dangers of high-altitude paragliding.

Aftermath and Investigation

Following the incident, the Aero Sports Association of Gansu Province confirmed Peng’s flight was not officially approved. Peng claimed he was conducting ground training when the winds unexpectedly lifted him. The association classified the event as an accident rather than illegal flying, but suspended Peng’s flying privileges for six months pending investigation.
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Peng, who holds a valid paragliding license and has logged multiple high-altitude flights in the region, has since avoided media attention, asking the public to refrain from amplifying the incident. His Douyin account has been set to private, and his flight record removed from XContest, a global paragliding platform.

Under Chinese regulations, all paragliding flights require prior approval and are prohibited in poor weather conditions. The ongoing investigation underscores the risks and regulatory challenges facing China’s growing adventure sports scene.



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