ABC News May 27, 2019

Colorado lawyer Chris Kulish is 11th person to die on Mount Everest this year

WATCH: Lawyer becomes second American to die on Mount Everest this week

A Colorado man has become the eleventh person to die climbing Mount Everest this year.

Chris Kulish, 62, of Boulder, died Monday while descending from the highest summit in the world, his family confirmed in a statement. The circumstances surrounding his death were not clear.

(MORE: 10th death in 2 months reported on Mount Everest amid long wait times to descend)

A record number of climbers have summited Mount Everest in April and May, the peak climbing months. Last week, there were reports of massive crowding, especially near Hillary Step, where climbers had to walk single file.

Project Possible/AFP/Getty Images
This handout photo taken on May 22, 2019 and released by climber Nirmal Purja's Project Possible expedition shows heavy traffic of mountain climbers lining up to stand at the summit of Mount Everest. Many teams had to line up for hours on May 22 to reach the summit, risking frostbites and altitude sickness, as a rush of climbers marked one of the busiest days on the world's highest mountain.

Kulish, a lawyer and member of the "7 Summit Club," climbed Everest with a small group in "near ideal weather," according to his family. He died after returning to the camp below the peak.

(MORE: Utah man Donald Lynn Cash, who reached Seven Summits, dies on Everest)

"He saw his last sunrise from the highest peak on Earth," the family said.

Kulish was "an inveterate climber of peaks in Colorado, the West and the world," his family said, adding that he "passed away doing what he loved."

Courtesy Kulish family
An undated photo of Chris Kulish at Mount Everest.

The tenth person to die this year was 41-year-old British climber Robin Haynes Fisher, officials said.

(MORE: Mount Everest tackles 60,000-pound trash problem with campaign to clean up waste)

The death of another climber, 55-year-old Donald Lynn Cash of Utah, who fainted shortly after reaching the Everest peak due to altitude sickness, was reported last week. Cash had conquered the Seven Summits -- the tallest mountains on each continent, guide company Pioneer Adventure said on its website.

Prakash Mathema/AFP/Getty Images
Mount Everest is seen in the Everest region, some 140 km northeast of Kathmandu, May 27, 2019. Ten people have died in little more than two weeks after poor weather cut the climbing window, leaving mountaineers waiting in long queues to the summit, risking exhaustion and running out of oxygen.

This year has been the deadliest for climbers on Mount Everest since 2012, when 10 climbers died. All 11 deaths in 2019 occurred during peak climbing season.

Officials have issued 367 permits to foreigners and another 14 to Nepalese mountaineers to climb Everest this year, according to a government liaison officer at base camp.

There have only five days when conditions were safe enough to summit, Alan Arnette, a mountaineering expert who runs a Mount Everest blog, told ABC News. Some climbers spent up to 20 hours above 8,000 meters due to a combination of exhaustion and wait times, Arnette said. The average time is between 10 and 12 hours, he said.

ABC News' Edit Honan and Clayton Sandell contributed to this report.