Pictures: Mongolia’s nomadic herders endure brutal winters | Climate Information

Adeyemi Adeyemi

World Courant

Altai, Western Mongolia – Mendei Berdimurat pulls on the reins of his horse and appears up from beneath the rim of a worn-out flat cap on his head.

The 52-year-old from Saksai within the Altai mountain vary in west Mongolia has been a herder all his life. However this yr he’s nervous.

“The lakes ought to have melted by now. That is June. However seeing it nonetheless frozen exhibits how unhealthy the winter has been,” he says.

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Mongolia’s harsh winters are lasting longer every year – bleeding into the summer time months – and threatening the survival of nomadic communities who make up one-third of the nation’s inhabitants of three million.

The intense climate and the severity of local weather change are additionally having a detrimental impact on meals safety and revenue, in accordance with the United Nations.

Berdimurat, who’s making his annual 150km migration along with his livestock from his winter camp to the summer time pastures, appears weary.

“I misplaced greater than 60 animals …” he says. “It’s some huge cash to lose.” His herd includes about 100 animals: yaks, cows, sheep, goats and horses; many are malnourished and look weak.

For many nomads, their wealth is held of their livestock. Since January, greater than 483,000 livestock have died from hunger, freezing or illness, in accordance with Mongolia’s Ministry of Meals, Agriculture and Gentle Trade.

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Serikgul Askerhan, a spouse of a herder in her 30s, says her household misplaced half of their sheep and goats plus 10 yaks this winter. In a easy wooden cabin throughout the nationwide park of Altai Tavan Bogd, 100km from Berdimurat and his herd, she serves Kazakh milk tea and selfmade yoghurt and cheese.

Coming in from the chilly, Askerhan’s 70-year-old mother-in-law who they name Äje (grandmother in Kazakh) rubs her fingers collectively to heat them. She has lived via many tough winters, however says this yr was uncommon as a result of the snow by no means stopped.

“Normally it’ll snow after which we now have just a few days the place it stops. January is the coldest month. However the snow got here once more in March and stored snowing till after April … Now in the midst of June locations are nonetheless frozen. I’ve by no means seen this in all my life.”

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The Mongolian authorities tried to gather and bury the lifeless animals this winter however the panorama – huge, open mountainous terrain that stretches so far as the attention can see – stays dotted with half-eaten, decayed carcasses now being uncovered from the deep thaw.

This yr, temperatures plummeted to beneath minus 40 levels Celsius (-40 levels Fahrenheit) in some provinces. Reduction companies have been attempting to help nomadic communities however many reside in hard-to-reach areas.

Final summer time 50 p.c of the territories within the west and south noticed hay yields decline from the extreme drought and there was a deterioration of pasture from overgrazing and inadequate reserves for livestock manufacturing. When winter hit, the nomads have been ill-prepared. The frozen lakes in Altai at the moment are starting to soften and flooding is the subsequent drawback they face – because it cuts off key entry routes and makes migration tougher and riskier.

“Mongolia is extremely weak to local weather change, experiencing heat temperatures, at virtually 3 times the speed of the worldwide common within the final 70 years,” Tapan Mishra, the UN’s resident coordinator for Mongolia, mentioned in a March report.

About 80 p.c of rural households in Mongolia are vulnerable to shedding their livelihoods, Mishra added, as a consequence of unfavourable climate situations, inadequate reserves for livestock manufacturing and the financial disaster’s impact on gasoline and meals provides.

In his house inside Altai Tavan Bogd nationwide park, Ajken Tabysbek, a retired 80-year-old herder, sits holding a bowl of stewed minced mutton. His two sons now herd the household’s livestock.

He says in his lifetime he has by no means witnessed a winter like this. “There was a lot snow, and since February it didn’t cease. It meant there was no grass to graze the animals.”

“Is that this local weather change? He asks. “I don’t know, however I do know that the winters aren’t the identical. There’s particular change.”

Pictures: Mongolia’s nomadic herders endure brutal winters | Climate Information

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