Current:Home > InvestAP PHOTOS: Mongolia’s herders fight climate change with their own adaptability and new technology -VitalWealth Strategies
AP PHOTOS: Mongolia’s herders fight climate change with their own adaptability and new technology
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:04:44
SUKHBAATAR, Mongolia (AP) — For millennia, herders in Mongolia and their animals have lived and died together in the country’s vast grasslands, slowly shaping one of the last uninterrupted ecosystems of its kind.
And at first glance, everything appears the way it may have looked all those years back.
A herder watches attentively as a horse gave birth on a cold spring morning. Families look for pastures for their animals to graze. Gers — traditional insulated tents made with wooden frames — still face east and the rising sun, as they have for nomads since the days of Genghis Khan.
But climate change is altering everything: Since 1940, the country’s government says, average temperatures have risen 2.2 degrees Celsius (nearly 4 degrees Fahrenheit). With the increase comes the threat of pastures being eaten away by an encroaching desert and water sources drying out. And dzuds — natural disasters unique to Mongolia caused by droughts and severe, snowy winters — have grown harsher and more frequent.
“We need more rain,” said Lkhaebum, who like other Mongolians uses only his given name and has been herding for decades.
Lkhaebum and other nomads of Mongolia have adapted, once again, adding new technologies to their arsenal of traditional knowledge to negotiate an increasingly unreliable climate. Motorbikes mean they can zip through dust storms to look for lost sheep. Solar energy means they can keep their phones charged and access the internet to exchange information with neighbors about newer pastures, and keep their freezers going to preserve meat for lean days.
The ability to deal with climate change will also impact those who live in cities, including the capital, Ulaanbaatar. The 1.6 million people of the city constitute nearly half of the country’s population, and more people are moving in every day. Construction is booming to provide housing, skyscrapers dot the skyline, and roads are snarled with large cars.
And every day, trucks arrive in urban markets with animals raised in the countryside to feed city inhabitants.
Sukhbaatar Square, where protesters had rallied in 1990 to demand freedom from a weakening Soviet Union, now has young boys playing basketball in the evening. Many don’t see a future in herding, but they admit the importance that nomads and their animals have in their culture.
___
EDITORS’ NOTE — This story is part of The Protein Problem, an AP series that examines the question: Can we feed this growing world without starving the planet? To see the full project, visit https://projects.apnews.com/features/2023/the-protein-problem/index.html
veryGood! (4976)
Related
- PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
- Large swaths of the U.S. set daily temperature records
- How a handful of metals could determine the future of the electric car industry
- Flooding kills at least 259 in South Africa
- Oklahoma parole board recommends governor spare the life of man on death row
- Home generator sales are booming with mass outages, climate change and COVID
- Khloe Kardashian Gives Nod to Tristan Thompson's Late Mom in Birthday Tribute to Daughter True
- Can Skiing Survive Climate Change?
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Mystery object that washed up on Australia beach believed to be part of a rocket
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Foresters hope 'assisted migration' will preserve landscapes as the climate changes
- North Korea launches ballistic missile, South Korea says, two days after claiming to repel U.S. spy plane
- Beauty Influencer Amanda Diaz Swears By These 10 Coachella Essentials
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- Yellowstone's northern half is unlikely to reopen this summer due to severe flooding
- Stop Worrying About Frizz and Sweat, Use These 11 Hair Products to Battle Humidity
- Family sues over fatal police tasering of 95-year-old Australian great-grandmother
Recommendation
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Shop the 15 Coachella Essentials Chriselle Lim Is Packing for Festival Weekend
The future cost of climate inaction? $2 trillion a year, says the government
Satellite photos show Tonga before and after huge undersea volcano eruption
Man charged with murder in death of beloved Detroit-area neurosurgeon
Love Island Host Maya Jama Addresses Leonardo DiCaprio Dating Rumors
Heat wave in Europe could be poised to set a new temperature record in Italy
Encore: Tempe creates emergency response center to be a climate disaster refuge