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State Emergency Commission 2016
January 4, State Emergency Commission 2016 EMERGENCY ASSESSMENT TEAM REPORT ON THE MISSION FOR EVALUATION OF THE WINTER CONDITIONS AND RISK ASSESSMENT Regarding the direction given by the Prime Minister of Mongolia, Emergency Assessment Teams to examine the winter conditions, conduct disaster risk assessments in 21 aimags and solve some urgent issues on the site, established under the Order of the Deputy Prime Minister of Mongolia and Chairperson of the State Emergency Commission, had a mission from 16 December to 28 December 2015 in 21 aimags. The first team headed by Colonel M.Enkh-Amar, a Secretary of the State Emergency Commission, worked in Uvurkhangai, Bayakhongor, Gobi-Altai, Khovd, Bayan-Ulgii, Uvs, Zavkhan, Arkhangai, Khuvsgul, Bulgan, Orkhon, Selenge and Darkhan-Uul aimags. The second team headed by Colonel Ts.Ganzorig, a Deputy Chief of NEMA, worked in Khentii, Dornod, Sukhbaatar, Dornogobi, Umnugobi, Dundgobi, Gobisumber and Tuv aimags. In total, the both teams visited 91 soums of 21 aimags. The teams included the officials and experts from the line ministries and agencies such as State Emergency Commission, Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Ministry of Health and Sports, Ministry of Road and Transport, National Emergency Management Agency, General Police Department, Specialised Inspection Authotiry, Hydro-Meteorological and Environmental Research Centre, and Disaster Research Institute. During the mission, the meetings of the aimag emergency commissions were convened, the situation in the soums with deteriorating winter conditions was examined in the field, herding households were visited, assessment and conclusions were made on the operations of the local branches of the state reserves, thermotransmission lines, the preparedness of power stations and the outreach of herders on remote pasture lands by public and health services, examination of the work for clearing blocked roads and mountain passes was carried out, some issues were solved and necessary assignments and directions were given. -
Fiscal Federalism and Decentralization in Mongolia
Universität Potsdam Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj Fiscal federalism and decentralization in Mongolia Universitätsverlag Potsdam Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj Fiscal federalism and decentralization in Mongolia Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj Fiscal federalism and decentralization in Mongolia Universitätsverlag Potsdam Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar. Universitätsverlag Potsdam 2010 http://info.ub.uni-potsdam.de/verlag.htm Am Neuen Palais 10, 14469 Potsdam Tel.: +49 (0)331 977 4623 / Fax: 3474 E-Mail: [email protected] Das Manuskript ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Zugl.: Potsdam, Univ., Diss., 2010 Online veröffentlicht auf dem Publikationsserver der Universität Potsdam URL http://pub.ub.uni-potsdam.de/volltexte/2010/4176/ URN urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-41768 http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-41768 Zugleich gedruckt erschienen im Universitätsverlag Potsdam ISBN 978-3-86956-053-3 Abstract Fiscal federalism has been an important topic among public finance theorists in the last four decades. There is a series of arguments that decentralization of governments enhances growth by improving allocation efficiency. However, the empirical studies have shown mixed results for industrialized and developing countries and some of them have demonstrated that there might be a threshold level of economic development below which decentralization is not effective. Developing and transition countries have developed a variety of forms of fiscal decentralization as a possible strategy to achieve effective and efficient governmental structures. A generalized principle of decentralization due to the country specific circumstances does not exist. Therefore, decentra- lization has taken place in different forms in various countries at different times, and even exactly the same extent of decentralization may have had different impacts under different conditions. -
MONGOLIA Linking the Improvement in Nomadic Herding Practices To
MONGOLIA Cachemire 4 © Pearly Jacob Linking the improvement in nomadic herding practices to sustainable cashmere production in the Gobi Desert Pearly Jacob Fighting against pasture degradation in the Gobi Desert by proposing to develop a sustainable and environmentally-friendly sector for cashmere in which it is produced. CONTEXTE ET OBJECTIFS 01/01/2015 31/12/2019 Bayankhongor Province is located in south-west Mongolia, the Project start Project end Great Lakes region, in the far north of the Gobi Desert. It is date date characterized by a semi-arid territory mainly covered by a desert steppe with sparse vegetation, and by the presence of 03/12/2014 lakes and rivers, which can dry up certain years when there is Project grant a low level of rainfall. The area has a continental climate and date experiences extreme temperatures (in both winter and Mongolie summer). Average annual rainfall stands at 100 mm. Location The project comes in addition to the “Sustainable Cashmere” Land degradation and project financed by the European Union on the baghs of Jinst er chemical pollutants Bogd and implemented by AVSF from 2014 to 2016, by adding sector(s) 3 soums: Shinejinst, Bombogor and Baatsagaan. subvention Financing Tool(s) 3 598 797 EUR DESCRIPTION Amount of the program Including FFEM funding The project area covers 5 soums (Mongolian territorial unit equivalent to a French department), especially selected for 1 200 000 EUR their complementarity in terms of agroecological areas and Amount of FFEM funding issues related to raising cashmere goats: 4 ans - Bombogor: 3,044 km² - 2,584 inhabitants Duration of funding - Baatsagaan: 5,395 km² - 3,599 inhabitants - Jinst: 5,313 km² - 2,023 inhabitants AVSF - Bogd: 3,993 km² - 2,900 inhabitants Beneficiaries - Shinejinst: 16,501 km² - 2,187 inhabitants Cofinanceur(s) The total surface area of the zone stands at 34,246 km², i.e. -
Mongolia Country Report 2018
Toxic Site Identification Program in Mongolia Award: DCI-ENV/2015/371157 Prepared by: Erdenesaikhan Naidansuren Prepared for: UNIDO Date: October 2018 Pure Earth 475 Riverside Drive, Suite 860 New York, NY, USA +1 212 647 8330 www.pureearth.org Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................. 3 Organizational Background .................................................................................................... 3 Toxic Site Identification Program (TSIP) ............................................................................... 3 Project Background ................................................................................................................. 5 Country Background ............................................................................................................... 5 Implimentation Strategy .......................................................................................................... 6 Coordinating with the Government ........................................................................................ 6 Sharing TSIP Information ....................................................................................................... 7 Current Work .......................................................................................................................... 8 TSIP Training in Mongolia ....................................................................................................... 9 Sites -
Examining the Impact of Grazing Pressure and Severe Winter
EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF GRAZING PRESSURE AND SEVERE WINTER DISASTERS ON LIVESTOCK POPULATION DYNAMICS IN MONGOLIAN RANGELAND A Thesis by WEIQIAN GAO Submitted to the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE Chair of Committee, Richard Conner Co-Chair of Committee, Jay Angerer Committee Member, William Grant Head of Department, Kathleen Kavanagh December 2016 Major Subject: Ecosystem Science and Management Copyright 2016 Weiqian Gao ABSTRACT Rangelands in Mongolia provide biomass for livestock grazing and support the environment that pastoralists have depended on for thousands of years. The quantity and quality of livestock and pasture are critically important to the pastoralists and entire country. Dzud is Mongolian term of severe winter disasters, which can be characterized by heavy snowfall, extreme low temperatures and lack of access to forage and water. The overall research aim is to study the influence of grazing pressure and severe winter disasters on livestock population dynamics on rangeland in Mongolia. The primary objectives were to evaluate Mongolian rangeland grazing pressure and analyze its relationship with livestock losses both spatially and temporally, especially during the dzud periods; in addition, simulation modeling was used to examine thresholds of forage use, extreme low temperature and snowfall conditions on livestock population dynamics. During the period from 2000 to 2014, the number of hectares delineated as overgrazed was highest in 2014, and was lowest in 2003. Large areas of overgrazing were identified in the central and southern portions of the country. Land areas that were consistently overgrazed (> 10 years) totaled 8.6% of the total land area in Mongolia. -
Fiber Optic Backbone of Information Communications Network Llc I
INTRODUCTION Information Communications Network LLC /ICNC/ was established in 2006 to operate the state owned national backbone network, to ensure secure and reliable operation and MEMBERSHIP maintenance of the network and to provide interoperability and interconnection services to telecoms operators while playing a major role in the ongoing development of Mongolia’s Information Communications Network infrastructure. LLC is an active sector member of the International Telecommunications Union Information Communications Network LLC is a leading provider of broadband services and the Asia Pacific Telecommunity. for the carrier marketplace and owner of the largest open access fiber-optic network in Mongolia. Information Communications Network LLC is a member of the Asian Productivity Currently, Information Communications Network LLC operates and maintains over 70 percent Organization, the Mongolian National of the national fiber-optic network. We own and operate 9’446 manholes, 791’684.5 Chamber of Commerce and Industry and meters of ducts, which are routed across 17’421 kilometers, 21 provinces and 283 villages of the Mongolian Human Resource Institute. Mongolia. We offer co-location services to mobile operators and telecoms service providers on our facilities and towers throughout Ulaanbaatar city, 21 provinces and 373 villages of Mongolia. Team of 1470 highly qualified employees, engineers and technicians are our most valuable assets. We are cooperating with more than 230 public and private communication service providers. ACCESSIBLE AND RELIABLE NETWORK VISION: LEADING TOGETHER FIBER OPTIC LENGTH: 17’421 KM TRANSMISSION NETWORK CAPACITY: LOCAL 25 GBPS, INTERNATIONAL: 100GBPS OUTSIDE PLANT: MISSION 9’446 MANHOLES, 791’684 METERS OF DUCTS Be the most accessible high-speed national broadband network. -
Remote Sensing
remote sensing Article Extreme Climate Event and Its Impact on Landscape Resilience in Gobi Region of Mongolia Oyudari Vova 1,* , Martin Kappas 1 , Tsolmon Renchin 2 and Steven R. Fassnacht 1,3,4,5 1 Cartography, GIS and Remote Sensing Department, Institute of Geography, University of Göttingen, 37007 Göttingen, Germany; [email protected] (M.K.); [email protected] (S.R.F.) 2 Department of Physics, National University of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar 14200, Mongolia; [email protected] 3 Department of Ecosystem Science and Sustainability—Watershed Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1476, USA 4 Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, CSU, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1375, USA 5 Natural Resources Ecology Lab, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1499, USA * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +49-176-25398594 Received: 9 July 2020; Accepted: 2 September 2020; Published: 5 September 2020 Abstract: The dzud, a specific type of climate disaster in Mongolia, is responsible for serious environmental and economic damage. It is characterized by heavy snowfall and severe winter conditions, causing mass livestock deaths that occur through the following spring. These events substantially limit socioeconomic development in Mongolia. In this research, we conducted an analysis of several dzud events (2000, 2001, 2002, and 2010) to understand the spatial and temporal variability of vegetation conditions in the Gobi region of Mongolia. The present paper also establishes how these extreme climatic events affect vegetation cover and local grazing conditions using the seasonal aridity index (aAIZ), time-series Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), and livestock data. -
287 the Runic Inscription Monuments and Stamps in Bayankhongor
2nd International Congress On New Horizons In Education And Social Sciences (ICES-2019) Proceedings June 18-19, 2019 Istanbul-TURKEY The Runic inscription monuments and stamps in Bayankhongor province, Mongolia Assist.Prof. Dr. Gerelmaa. NAMSRAI1 Assist.Prof. Dr. Azzaya. BADAM2 Sen.lec. PhD (c). Otgonsuren. TSEDEN3 ABSTRACT In last two decades, numbers of runic inscriptions have been found in the western part of Mongolia: mostly in Bayan-Ulgii, Khovd and Govi-Altai provinces, and Pages: 287-295 comparatively less in Uvs and Zavkhan provinces, and also Bayankhongor province in which the following five inscriptions date back to the Ancient Turkic Period: Doi: 10.21733/ibad.585676 1. Inscription of Bömbögör monument (1986) 2. Inscription of the Three Mandalas: Adag mandala (the End Mandala) and Dund Mandala (The Middle Mandala) (1987) 3. Inscription of Olon Nuur (2008) 287 4. Inscription of Dalt (2012) 1 National University of Mongolia, 5. Inscription of Khirgisiin Ovoo Monument (2016). MONGOLIA, [email protected] Of them, the initial two inscriptions had been discovered by 1990, and the latter 2 National University of Mongolia, three since 2008, which have been followed by some alternative versions of MONGOLIA, [email protected] deciphering due to some inadequate reviews. So they have given us a motivation to review the meanings of the words and expressions incorporated in them, as the 3 National University of Mongolia, following: MONGOLIA, [email protected] These two inscriptions – properly viewed to be the classical monuments of the runic inscription, have some special words and expressions as well as personal names those are not noted in the monuments found in other provinces. -
Severe Winter 27 May 2010
Emergency appeal n° MDRMN004 Mongolia: GLIDE n° CW-2010-000010-MNG Operations update n° 2 Severe winter 27 May 2010 Period covered by this Ops Update: 23 April to 20 May 2010 Appeal target (current): CHF 1,062,295 Appeal coverage: 71% <click here to go directly to the updated donor response list, or here to contact details> Appeal history: • This Emergency Appeal was launched on 29 March 2010, seeking CHF 1,062,295 for six months period in order to assist 13,600 beneficiaries in 13 provinces whose vulnerability and needs have dramatically increased due to the seriousness of the climatic and social situation and its worsening. • Disaster Relief Emergency Fund (DREF): CHF 100,000 (USD 93,924 or EUR 70,006) was allocated from the Federation’s DREF to support the national society in this operation. Unearmarked funds to replenish DREF are encouraged. Mr. Ganbaatar’s family was entitled to food and non-food assistance from the DREF cold waves operation in March 2010 because the family has lost all the animals that belonged to them as well as those they were herding for a wage. In addition, the family has more than 3 children under 16 and mother is breastfeeding. During IFRC visit in April, it was reported that their food reserve will be enough until mid May and after that, the family will have no other solution to feed their children. Left without a single animal in the yard and having no alternative livelihood option, the parents were more than devastated about their children’s future but hide their emotions and worries to keep the family atmosphere warm and happy. -
Central Mongolia
© Lonely Planet Publications 101 Central Mongolia Roll out of Ulaanbaatar in a Russian jeep and you’ll only need to put a hill or two between yourself and the city before the vast steppes of cental Mongolia begin to unfold before your eyes. Verdant swaths of empty landscapes are sprinkled with tiny gers stretching to CENTRAL MONGOLIA the horizon while magical light plays through clouds and across the valleys. But central Mongolia offers more than steppes. Landscapes are broken by the forested hillsides of the Khan Khentii range, meandering rivers such as the Tuul and lunar-like lava fields spilling across central Arkhangai. The silhouette of a lone horseman on a hill or camels caravanning in the distance completes every perfect day. The rivers and back trails of Gorkhi-Terelj National Park beckon the outdoor enthusiast. At Khustain National Park you can break out the binoculars and spot the reintroduced takhi horse. Alternatively, set out from Ulaanbaatar on foot, climb the holy Bogdkhan Uul to the south of the city, and camp out by Mandshir Khiid. Travelling by horse is another great way to get around the region. Travellers with more time on their hands can spend weeks exploring the ancient sites and remote areas of the mighty Khangai and its surrounding plains. Central Mongolia’s aimags (provinces), Töv, Arkhangai and Övörkhangai, are the most vis- ited areas in the countryside. The roads and transport are far better here than in the rest of Mongolia, and there is plenty to see, including ancient monasteries, gorgeous lakes and many national parks. -
Dzud: Adaptation and Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social‐Ecological Systems
Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY & THE CENTER FOR NOMADIC PASTORALISM STUDIES Lessons from the Dzud: Adaptation and Resilience in Mongolian Pastoral Social‐Ecological Systems María E. Fernández‐Gimenez, Batbuyan Batjav and Batkhishig Baival June 2012 Table of Contents Acknowledgements ....................................................................................................................................... 1 Executive Summary ....................................................................................................................................... 2 Rationale, Methods, and Objectives ......................................................................................................... 2 Factors Affecting Vulnerability .................................................................................................................. 3 Adaptive Strategies and Constraints to Adaptation ................................................................................. 3 Reflections on Resilience .......................................................................................................................... 5 1) Resilience to Past Dzud .................................................................................................................... 5 2) A “Teachable Moment” for Transformation ..................................................................................... 6 3) The Roles of Pasture -
20101214 Mongolia Assessment DZUD Epc__KB Clean
2009/2010 MONGOLIA DZUD: DISPLACED RURAL HERDER COMMUNITIES RESPONSE ASSESSMENT AND INTENTIONS SURVEY (RAIS) FUNDED BY THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR MIGRATION (IOM) AUGUST 2010 1 Table of Contents Table of Contents...............................................................................................................2 Glossary of Terms Executive Summary Recommendations for responses The Mongolian Migration Context.....................................................................................3 Dzud Affected Community Response Assessment and Intentions Survey (RAIS).............11 Analysis of Data from the RAIS.......................................................................................12 1. Impact of Dzud and Migrations............................................................................12 2. Perceived alternatives...........................................................................................17 3. Humanitarian Response........................................................................................18 4. Movement of Populations and Intentions..............................................................21 5. Access to Information...........................................................................................22 6. Summary of Data Analysis...................................................................................23 Annex 1 Areas and number of family surveyed................................................................25 Annex 2 Access DB Front Page.......................................................................................26