Rodney Hogg saw the body of his climbing friend Peter Kinloch on a ledge 1,000 ft below the peak as he neared the top of the mountain.
Mr Kinloch, 28, had been attempting the Seven Summits Challenge last year, in which climbers attempt to conquer the highest peak of each continent.
Frozen body: Peter Kinloch, left, with his climbing buddy Rod Hogg, right, on a previous exhibition. Hogg found his friend's body on an expedition last month
Fellow climbers in his party said the 28-year-old , who was an IT specialist with Merseyside Police, suffered snow blindess and lost co-ordination before collapsing.
Three Nepalese Sherpas spent hours trying to resuscitate the climber but were forced to abandon his body on the mountain.
Climbing buddies: Peter Kinloch, left, and Rod Hogg, who found his friend's body on the mountain
The BBC employee was raising money for Children In Need and had the charity's mascot Pudsey Bear with him as he climbed the peak in May with a 10-man team.
'It was too dangerous to climb down to get closer to him so I had an emotional moment up there to pay my respects,' said Mr Hogg.
Grim find: Rod Hogg said his friend's body was preserved by the ice
Mr Hogg explained that the Sherpas had clipped his friend to a fixed line on the mountainside before he died, which means his body is likely to remain there forever unless he is cut free.
Everest holds the bodies of at least 200 climbers who have died in their attempts to scale the mountain, say experts.
The mountain is five-and-a-half miles above sea level, with an exact height of 29,029ft, and straddles the border of Nepal and Tibet in the Himalayas.
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