Events
| Name | organizer | Where |
|---|---|---|
| MBCC “Doing Business with Mongolia seminar and Christmas Receptiom” Dec 10. 2025 London UK | MBCCI | London UK Goodman LLC |
NEWS
World Bank: Mongolia’s Economy Stays Resilient but Faces Rising Uncertainty www.reliefweb.int/
Mongolia’s economy is projected to grow at 5.0 percent in 2026, as mining and agricultural output normalizes following a strong 2025 performance, according to the latest Mongolia Economic Update.
Despite trade disruptions and elevated geopolitical tensions, Mongolia’s economy expanded by 6.9 percent in 2025. Growth was driven by a strong rebound in agriculture and solid mining performance, particularly copper production at Oyu Tolgoi, a key national mine. These growth drivers helped offset weaker coal activity. Other sectors experienced mixed performance, with strong growth in construction and manufacturing, while trade and services moderated.
Strong export earnings and resilient household incomes kept consumer spending high. Combined with higher food and energy prices, these factors pushed inflation up from 6.8 percent average in 2024 to 8.6 percent in 2025. Over the medium term, growth is projected to average approximately 5.5 percent in 2027-28, supported by large infrastructure projects and sustained domestic demand.
Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. Globally, trade uncertainty and a prolonged Middle East conflict could weaken external demand, disrupt mineral exports, raise production costs and consumer prices, and slow growth. Domestically, stronger-than-expected fiscal spending could boost growth in the short-term but may widen external imbalances and increase inflation.
“Mongolia’s growth remains solid, but uncertainty has risen,” said World Bank Country Manager for Mongolia Taehyun Lee. “Protecting macroeconomic stability and vulnerable households from potential prolonged external shocks, while diversifying the economy and boosting its competitiveness, remain key pressing priorities.”
The report highlights the importance of strengthening economic resilience and supporting diversification. It calls for addressing persistent infrastructure gaps and advancing critical mineral development to enhance competitiveness, alongside efforts to strengthen disaster preparedness and climate resilience. In this context, the report’s special chapter examines how the clustering of firms and workers in Ulaanbaatar raises productivity and creates opportunities. It also shows, however, how growing urban congestion may limit these gains. This highlights the need to improve urban efficiency and promote more balanced spatial development across the country.
PRESS RELEASE NO: 2026/050/EAP
Contacts
In Ulaanbaatar
B.Javkhlan
+976-70078207
jbolderdene@worldbankgroup.org
In Washington DC
Nansia Constantinou
+1-202-458-5008
nconstantinou@worldbankgroup.org
Can Uchral Hold On? Beyond Mongolia’s Leadership Shake-Up www.thediplomat.com
For 36 years, Mongolia has stood as a democratic anomaly in Northeast Asia: an open parliamentary republic wedged between the authoritarian giants of China and Russia, defying geopolitical gravity to sustain free elections, institutional pluralism, and a vibrant civil society.
That hard-won democratic experiment now faces its most consequential stress test in a generation. Over nine days in late March and early April 2026, Mongolia executed a constitutionally impeccable yet politically ruthless leadership transition that saw 39-year-old Nyam-Osor Uchral, chairman of the ruling Mongolian People’s Party (MPP), ascend to the premiership, consolidate control over the party and the parliament, install a loyalist as legislative speaker, and swear in a new 19-member cabinet.
Officially framed as a pragmatic fix for crippling legislative gridlock and cascading global economic headwinds, the shake-up represents the most dramatic concentration of power in a single figure since Mongolia’s 1990 democratic revolution. Uchral’s rise was enabled by a year of factional warfare within the MPP, a constitutional crisis that undermined parliamentary legitimacy, and a public exhausted by a revolving door of prime ministers, in inluding three in just 10 months.
The critical question is whether Uchral deliver on his promises of stability and prosperity without eroding the democratic checks and balances that have long been Mongolia’s greatest domestic and geopolitical strength.
Roots of the Upheaval
The leadership shake-up was not a spontaneous reaction to crisis, but the culmination of a 12-month power struggle that split the MPP and brought Mongolia’s governing institutions to the brink of collapse. The fuse was lit in June 2025, when Prime Minister Luvsannamsrai Oyun-Erdene was ousted amid youth-led street protests over high-profile corruption scandals – most infamously, public outrage over his son’s extravagant lifestyle amid widespread economic hardship – and a no-confidence vote orchestrated by rival MPP factions.
Into this vacuum stepped Gombojav Zandanshatar, a seasoned technocrat and parliamentarian with close ties to President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh, who was installed as a caretaker premier tasked with calming public anger and steadying the economy. Yet Zandanshatar’s tenure was doomed from the start, undermined by a bitter factional war within the MPP that exploded into a full-blown constitutional crisis in October 2025.
On October 17, a faction within the MPP, aligned with then-Parliamentary Speaker Dashzegve Amarbayasgalan, pushed through Resolution No. 95 to dismiss Zandanshatar as prime minister. The vote was marred by blatant procedural violations: it used an indirect, ambiguously worded motion instead of the explicit dismissal required by the constitution, merged attendance across two separate days to meet quorum requirements, and counted non-voting lawmakers as opposing the prime minister. Amarbayasgalan resigned as speaker the same day, while Zandanshatar immediately challenged the vote in the Constitutional Court.
On October 22, the court issued a final ruling, finding that Resolution No. 95 was unconstitutional and void ab initio, having violated core democratic and rule of law principles enshrined in the constitution. The ruling left Zandanshatar in office but fatally weakened his authority, exposing deep rifts within the MPP that would paralyze governance for the next six months. The party split into two major rival blocs – a defensive “around 30 faction” aligned with Oyun-Erdene and Amarbayasgalan, and an offensive “over 30 faction” tied to Uchral and Zandanshatar, backed quietly by Khurelsukh – and a small swing bloc of provincial lawmakers.
It was in the context of this stalemate that Uchral emerged as a consensus candidate. A lawyer and career MPP official with a reputation for bridging factional divides, Uchral was elected MPP chairman in November 2025 with 94.95 percent of the vote, and subsequently appointed parliamentary speaker. By early 2026, the offensive faction controlled party organs, enjoyed a working majority via the swing faction, and possessed the quiet endorsement of the president, who viewed alignment with Uchral as essential for MPP unity and his own 2027 re-election prospects.
Manufactured Gridlock
Uchral’s path to the premiership was built on the very gridlock he would later promise to end. As both MPP chairman and parliamentary speaker, he held an unprecedented dual role that the opposition Democratic Party (DP) argued violated the spirit of Mongolia’s 1992 constitution, which enshrines the separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches.
In early 2026, the DP launched a full parliamentary boycott, refusing to attend sessions unless Uchral relinquished one of his two roles. The boycott stripped the 126-seat State Great Khural of its quorum, grinding all legislative work, including the passage of critical economic and budgetary measures, to a complete halt. Uchral’s allies blamed the resulting paralysis on Zandanshatar’s government, framing the caretaker premier as incapable of breaking the deadlock.
The end came swiftly. On March 27, Zandanshatar resigned, framing his departure as a patriotic sacrifice to end the impasse.
“Political stability cannot exist when the ruling party fights itself,” he warned in a veiled rebuke of the MPP’s factional warfare. His exit cleared the final hurdle for Uchral’s ascent.
The MPP moved with choreographed precision. On March 29, the party’s conference nominated Uchral as prime minister with a near-unanimous 99.7 percent of the vote – a result that reflected the widespread suppression of internal dissent. On March 30, Uchral formally resigned as speaker, a tactical move presented as a commitment to the separation of powers.
“I am submitting my resignation to ensure political stability, preserve parliamentary immunity, and place the national interest above all else,” he told parliament.
The resignation was strategic realignment, not a concession of authority. As MPP chairman, he retained full control over the party’s 68-seat parliamentary majority, ensuring the president’s loyalist ally Sandag Byambatsogt would be elected speaker. On March 30-31, parliament confirmed Uchral as Mongolia’s 35th prime minister with 88 votes in favor out of 107 participating lawmakers, an 82.2 percent majority achieved amid a partial DP boycott. By April 4, his 19-member cabinet, including two ministers from the HUN Party and one from the National Coalition, was sworn in.
This sweeping consolidation of power is not unfolding in a political vacuum. While the MPP’s 68 seats in the 126-seat State Great Khural fall short of the two-thirds supermajority required to amend the Mongolian Constitution, the party retains enough legislative control to ram through key cabinet appointments and core economic bills without meaningful opposition pushback. At the same time, this outward dominance masks deep internal fissures. Far from an ideologically cohesive movement, the MPP is a sprawling, fractious coalition of regional and sectoral patronage networks, each locked in a zero-sum battle for control of the state’s most lucrative levers of power – above all, the country’s vast mining wealth, which generates over 90 percent of Mongolia’s exports, nearly all of which flow to China. The relentless turnover of prime ministers in recent years has not been driven by substantive policy disagreement, but by a cutthroat intra-party power struggle waged with an unblinking eye on the 2027 presidential election and 2028 parliamentary polls.
Ideologically, Uchral’s offensive faction favors muscular executive action to break years of legislative gridlock, selective market liberalization to unlock private sector growth, and a balanced foreign policy that preserves stability with China and Russia while cautiously deepening ties with its Western and Asian “Third Neighbor” partners — all in service of its overriding, near-existential political goal: locking in MPP dominance ahead of the 2027 and 2028 election cycles by neutralizing internal rivals, delivering tangible economic relief to cash-strapped households, and cementing its grip on the levers of state power before the electorate heads to the polls.
Geopolitical Pre-Clearance
A critical, underreported factor in Uchral’s seamless rise was his pre-transition diplomatic groundwork to secure tacit acceptance from Mongolia’s three most critical foreign partners: Russia, China, and the United States. His February 2026 visit to Moscow and March trip to Beijing were dismissed by critics as underwhelming, as he did not meet with Presidents Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping. Yet this criticism misreads the core strategic logic: as party chairman and speaker, Uchral’s legitimate counterparts were legislative and party leaders, not heads of state. Presidential meetings would have been protocol-inappropriate for a figure not yet serving as head of government.
In Moscow, Uchral held substantive talks with State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, Federation Council Chair Valentina Matviyenko, and Deputy Chairman of Russia’s Security Council and Chairman of the United Russia party Dmitry Medvedev, advancing negotiations for an interim trade deal with the Eurasian Economic Union and securing commitments on uninterrupted Russian fuel supplies. In Beijing, he met with National People’s Congress Chairman Zhao Leji, senior CCP Politburo member Cai Qi, and Minister of the International Department of the CPC Central Committee Liu Haixing, reaffirming Mongolia’s commitment to the One China policy and pledging to deepen legislative and party-to-party ties.
The real purpose of these visits was to project Uchral as a credible, predictable statesman and secure tacit acceptance of his impending rise. Both Beijing and Moscow prioritize stability in Ulaanbaatar above all else: China relies on Mongolia for cheap, and significant, portions of its coal imports, while Russia depends on Mongolia for transit of the planned Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline, which promises billions in annual transit revenue for Mongolia. A centralized MPP government offered far greater predictability than factional chaos or a pro-Western reformist takeover.
Parallel outreach secured U.S. acquiescence as well. On February 5, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau met with Mongolian Foreign Minister Battsetseg Batmunkh to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to its Strategic Third Neighbor Partnership. On March 17, the two countries held their 17th Annual Bilateral Consultations in Ulaanbaatar, highlighting the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s $462 million Water Compact, cooperation in critical minerals, clean energy, and artificial intelligence, and shared commitments to human rights and democratic governance. Even a March 18 U.S. decision to include Mongolia in its bond program, which sparked a formal diplomatic protest, did not derail ties; U.S. officials pledged continued coordination, ensuring the dispute did not disrupt the broader bilateral relationship. With no major external objections from any of Mongolia’s key partners, Uchral faced no risk of diplomatic isolation as he consolidated power at home.
The “Chuluulye” (Free Up) Agenda
Upon taking office, Uchral unveiled his “Chuluulye” (Free Up) reform agenda, a four-pillar blueprint built around economic liberation, legal and regulatory freedom, green development, and anti-corruption. His first official decree, issued on April 6, sought to bring this vision to life: unlocking the frozen bank accounts of 12,100 businesses suspended over tax arrears for a one-month period. The decree, issued under the General Tax Law’s provision allowing emergency measures during economic distress, only permits incoming deposits to the accounts, not outgoing spending. Uchral framed the move as a lifeline for struggling small and medium enterprises, allowing them to resume operations and settle tax debts, while promising to submit comprehensive tax reform legislation to parliament within six months.
Yet the decree exposes the core contradiction of Uchral’s agenda: he is using unilateral executive power to sell a vision of economic freedom, while sidelining the legislative oversight that prevents elite capture. For all its pro-market rhetoric, the measure is a limited, short-term fix. Businesses cannot access their funds to pay suppliers or employees, only receive revenue and settle tax debts, meaning it will do little to revive struggling operations. Instead, its core design is twofold: to shore up critical support from Mongolia’s business community, and to project an image of decisive crisis leadership at a moment of severe economic strain. Year-on-year food inflation has reached 12.3 percent, while devastating fuel price increases doubled domestic gasoline costs. The crisis in the Middle East — which began following U.S.-Israeli joint strikes against Iran which began on February 28 — is on the brink of further escalation that now threatens shutdowns at the Erdenet Copper Mine and Erdenes Tavantolgoi (ETT) Coal Mine, Mongolia’s largest industrial employers and the backbone of its national economy.
Public expectations are sharply divided. After three prime ministers in 10 months, many Mongolians are desperate for stability, and Uchral’s mantra of “solutions over seats” has resonated deeply. A 2025 Bertelsmann Transformation Index survey found that more than half of Mongolians distrust mainstream political parties, and many citizens, worn down by economic hardship, have signaled a willingness to trade procedural niceties for effective governance. Yet civil society groups and opposition lawmakers warn that Uchral’s concentration of power risks eroding the very democratic institutions that hold Mongolian leaders accountable for corruption and mismanagement.
The Four Existential Vulnerabilities That Will Define Uchral’s Tenure
For now, Uchral’s control appears absolute: he leads the party, controls the parliamentary majority through a loyalist speaker, and heads the cabinet, all with the president’s public backing. As one Ulaanbaatar-based political analyst noted privately, “All roads currently lead to one desk.”
Yet four critical vulnerabilities threaten his tenure, even amid his seemingly unassailable position.
First, factionalism has been suppressed, not eliminated. The MPP’s defensive bloc, aligned with Oyun-Erdene and Amarbayasgalan, retains the support of roughly 30 MPP MPs, and Oyun-Erdene has submitted an 894-page dossier of corruption allegations to the Independent Authority Against Corruption targeting a senior Uchral and Zandanshatar ally, Battumur Enkhbayar. Anti-corruption campaigns are a double-edged sword in Mongolia: while they can neutralize rivals, they can also quickly spiral out of control, exposing graft within the ruling faction and triggering public backlash.
Second, Mongolia’s economic fate remains hostage to forces beyond its control. Chinese demand for coal, Russian fuel export policies, and global commodity price fluctuations will shape the country’s performance far more than any domestic reform package. While over $7 billion in foreign reserves provide a temporary buffer, the IMF projects 2026 inflation will reach 8.1 percent, further eroding household purchasing power. Any slowdown in Chinese coal demand or disruption to Russian fuel supplies could shatter public trust faster than Uchral’s “Chuluulye” (Free Up) rhetoric can repair it.
Third, unaccountable decision-making carries severe risks of public backlash. These risks are already visible in the Tuul River Highway scandal, where Ulaanbaatar Governor Khishgee Nyambaatar, an MPP stalwart and Uchral ally, approved a $2.3 billion, 32-kilometer expressway without proper environmental review or public consultation. The destruction of ancient riparian forests sparked national outrage, with warnings that the project threatens the capital’s main drinking water aquifer for 1.8 million residents. A petition for Nyambaatar’s dismissal gathered around 40,000 signatures, a visceral reaction to elite impunity. Mongolia’s 2022-2023 mass coal corruption protests, which toppled Oyun-Erdene’s government, proved that citizens will take to the streets to oppose opaque, top-down governance.
Fourth, democratic erosion risks narrowing Mongolia’s geopolitical room to maneuver. Its democratic identity has long been the cornerstone of its “Third Neighbor” foreign policy, allowing balanced engagement with all major powers. A visible shift toward one-man rule could reduce Western political and investment support, deepening dependence on Beijing and Moscow and fueling domestic nationalist resentment — undermining the very framework that has safeguarded Mongolian sovereignty for three decades.
Conclusion
Mongolia’s 2026 leadership transition is neither a democratic collapse nor a routine cabinet reshuffle. It is a constitutionally compliant yet politically ruthless consolidation of power, born from manufactured gridlock, economic desperation, and geopolitical acquiescence, executed with impressive procedural discipline. Uchral takes office with a clear public mandate, a technocratic cabinet, and an ambitious reform agenda that could streamline bureaucracy, boost growth, and deliver relief to struggling households.
But the question of whether Uchral can hold on depends not on how much power he has centralized, but on how wisely he uses it. Success requires tangible economic progress, unflinching transparency, and a willingness to preserve institutional checks and balances, including the parliamentary investigative mechanisms now examining landmark cross-border deals with China. Failure – a reliance on factional loyalty, selective justice, or unaccountable top-down rule – will deepen public cynicism, reignite instability, and destroy the geopolitical flexibility that has served Ulaanbaatar for 30 years.
GUEST AUTHOR
Sumiya Chuluunbaatar
Sumiya Chuluunbaatar is an independent scholar specializing in Mongolian governance, international resource investment, and Mongolia’s foreign relations.
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$6 Million Digital Project Launched for Chinggis Khaan Museum www.zsm.mn
The Chinggis Khaan National Museum has launched a major project to develop digital content and upgrade its equipment, aiming to modernize operations and improve public access.
The project, jointly implemented by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, Tourism and Youth, the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA), and the museum, will run from 2026 to 2028 with total funding of 6 million USD (MNT 21.3 billion).
As part of the project, museum staff will receive training in the Republic of Korea in areas such as conservation, restoration, registration, exhibition planning, education, marketing, and digital development. The initiative will also develop digital content for selected exhibits from the museum’s third to ninth floors and strengthen the capacity of museum professionals.
Speaking at the launch, KOICA Resident Representative in Mongolia Ju Haein Nan said the project will also produce operational manuals and training programs related to collections management and conservation. She noted that it will contribute to tourism and help open the way for Mongolia’s cultural sector to reach a global level.
The museum also plans to establish a digital children’s museum to present cultural heritage in a more accessible and engaging way using modern technology.
Academician S.Chuluun: “The Largest Cultural Project Since 1990”
During the project launch, a brief interview was conducted with Museum Director and Academician S.Chuluun.
– Could you briefly introduce the project launched today? What makes it unique?
– This is the largest project in Mongolia’s cultural and humanities sector since 1990. It will play an important role in bringing a relatively new museum like ours to both regional and international levels. The project is being implemented with support from KOICA, with a total budget of MNT 21.3 billion. It has two main benefits: first, it will train professionals capable of operating the museum at international standards; second, it will allow us to fully equip the museum with modern equipment.
– As one of Mongolia’s newest national museums, how do you assess the current state of digital content and the impact of this project?
– The project will focus on three areas. First, we will strengthen human resource capacity across all fields to ensure sustainable development. Second, we will create exhibition content using modern digital technology. Third, we will train specialists over the next three years to develop and manage this content.
A digital children’s museum will also be established, and storage and preservation conditions will be improved. In addition, we will introduce standard equipment that meets international requirements. This creates a real opportunity for us to become a leading museum not only in Mongolia but also in the region.
– What benefits will a digital museum bring to the public?
– In the past, visitors might see exhibits without fully understanding them. Today, the world is becoming increasingly digital, and this gives us new opportunities to explain exhibits more clearly. For example, visitors may see stone statues but not fully understand the details. With digital content, we can present these elements in a clearer and more engaging way.
For children, we are creating interactive content that allows them to directly engage with exhibits. This makes the museum experience more accessible and meaningful.
– How is cooperation with the Republic of Korea supporting staff training?
– We are working with highly experienced Korean specialists. Some of them have worked in Mongolia for over 20 years, especially in archaeology and historical research. This gives them a strong understanding of Mongolia’s cultural heritage.
– You mentioned that the project will also benefit other museums. Does this mean it will extend beyond your museum?
– Yes, the project is not limited to our museum. Museums across Mongolia are involved, which is a major advantage. Other institutions will benefit from training and will also be able to use the digital content developed under the project.
By N.Nyamsuren
Source: Zuuniimedee № 68 (7810) April 10, 2026
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Steel plant worth $800 million to be built in Mongolia www.akipress.com
Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Damdinyam Gongor announced decisions that have been made at the recent Cabinet meeting, MiddleAsianNews reported.
"Today we witnessed a significant event: a decision was made at the Cabinet meeting to launch a large-scale construction project, namely, the construction of a steel plant," the Minister noted.
"This project is capable of covering 60-70% of domestic demand, halving the volumes of the cement industry, significantly reducing the cost of raw materials and creating approximately 1,700 new jobs. We are opening up opportunities for the participation of large international companies," he added.
"In addition, steel produced in Mongolia can be delivered to the European Union in 10 days, while steel produced in China takes 60 days. This will be a significant advantage for our country," the minister emphasized.
The steel plant, with a projected capacity of at least 1 million tons of steel, will be located in Darkhan-Uul province.
650 hectares of land in Darkhan-Uul province will be allocated for the construction.
As of today, Mongolia consumes 1 million tons of steel, and by 2030, this figure is expected to grow to 1.7 million tons.
TMK gas surge clears path to production at Mongolian project www.thewest.com.au
TMK Energy has delivered another impressive monthly update at its Gurvantes XXXV project in Mongolia, with March gas rates surging 48 per cent to 866 cubic metres per day, hitting a record 1,350 cubic metres in a single day.
The most recent well, LF-07, continues to steal the spotlight, confirming gas desorption is now underway and marking a key shift from early dewatering towards commercial-scale flows.
After a brief operational delay for safety and facility upgrades, output has rebounded to almost 23,000 standard cubic feet per day, with water production steady at 490 barrels per day - textbook reservoir behaviour in action.
The pilot well complex’s average daily output surged from 583 cubic metres in February. The star performer, LF-07, showed pressure communication between wells - a clear signal that the reservoir is behaving as a connected system rather than isolated pockets. This growing connectivity should underpin more consistent, controlled and commercial-scale gas flows down the track.
Surface upgrades at LF-07 have also helped to sustain higher flows. TMK is now carefully managing output to preserve the reservoir, maximise long-term volumes and feed potential early-stage power generation projects.
TMK also bolstered its operational momentum with regulatory support. In mid-March, the company signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Mongolia’s regulator, MRPAM, allowing gas to feed a pilot power project and establishing a framework to convert parts of the 8,400 square kilometre permit into an exploitation licence.
Approval of its 2026 work program has also greenlit three additional production wells for the year, reinforcing growth and ensuring a robust development rollout.
The acceleration of the gas rate at LF-07 is a clear demonstration that gas is being desorbed from the coals up-dip from this well and, more importantly, proof that we have reduced the reservoir pressure sufficiently to produce what appears to be commercially significant quantities of gas. The MoU signed with MRPAM, coincident with this increase in gas rates, is another positive indication that there is a very strong push by the Mongolian Government to quickly accelerate the growth of the gas industry.
TMK Energy chief executive officer Dougal Ferguson
With the MoU in place, TMK now has a ready-made market for its pilot production. To demonstrate the project’s potential to future off-takers, TMK is targeting a supply of 5,000 cubic metres of gas per day, with scope to scale up to 15,000 cubic metres per day under an extended arrangement.
Looking ahead, the company is expected to continue optimising its existing wells, potentially replicating the LF-07 design across new hotspots as it expands the pilot footprint.
TMK is sitting atop a contingent 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas, with over 5 trillion cubic feet of upside less than 20 kilometres from the Chinese border - a stone’s throw from major infrastructure and energy markets. With Asian gas demand surging amid energy security and emissions pressures, the project’s potential scale and proximity appear to give it a clear commercial edge.
With rising output, regulatory backing and approved drilling, TMK looks set to convert early pilot success into a production-ready asset.
And if the gas rate continues to accelerate, the company could be poised to turn its Gobi Basin pilot into a major success story, delivering value and momentum in the Mongolian gas market.
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5 children die from meningococcal disease and measles www.ubpost.mn
As of April 6, seven confirmed cases of meningococcal infection have been reported nationwide, resulting in three deaths, according to health authorities. The cases include three in Ulaanbaatar City, two in Khovd Province, and one each in Uvs and Darkhan-Uul provinces. The infections have affected children aged between six months and 10 years, with 66.7 percent of cases occurring in children under the age of five, highlighting the vulnerability of younger age groups.
Data from the past six years indicate that up to 56 percent of all meningococcal infections have been recorded in the capital city. Higher incidence rates have also been observed in Bayan-Ulgii, Darkhan-Uul, Dornod, Khuvsgul, Orkhon, Selenge, Tuv, Uvs, Uvurkhangai, and Zavkhan provinces. Within the capital city, Bayanzurkh, Chingeltei, Nalaikh, and Sukhbaatar districts have been identified as high-risk areas, suggesting the need for targeted monitoring and localized response measures.
Health officials note that meningococcal infections typically peak between December and June, accounting for approximately 80 to 90 percent of total annual cases, with a particularly sharp rise during the spring season. The National Center for Communicable Diseases has warned that case numbers may continue to increase in the coming weeks, urging parents and caregivers to remain vigilant for early symptoms such as fever, headache, vomiting, and rash. Early detection and immediate medical attention are critical to preventing severe complications and fatalities.
Meanwhile, Mongolia continues to face a prolonged measles outbreak, now in its 408th day. Two children in rural areas have recently died, bringing the total death toll to 17. A total of 14,562 measles cases have been recorded nationwide, with 62 patients currently hospitalized and receiving treatment. Among them, one child remains in critical condition.
Health authorities emphasize that both meningococcal infection and measles are preventable through vaccination. Citizens are encouraged to take advantage of available immunization services, including voluntary vaccination at specialized clinics, and to follow public health guidance aimed at reducing transmission, particularly among young children and vulnerable populations.
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‘Kherlen’ Meteorite Drawing Global Scientists’ Attention www.montsame.mn
The “Kherlen” meteorite is one of the meteorites that has attracted the attention of scientists worldwide. Preserved at the Natural History Museum, this specimen is a tektite meteorite with a glass-like structure, unlike typical stony or iron meteorites.
At around 1:00 a.m. on March 22, 1950, the meteorite fell about 80 km south of the Kherlen River, at a place called Uudiin-Am in Dornod aimag. Many local residents witnessed the incident and described a loud noise and a bluish-green flame as it descended. Upon impact, it melted thick snow in the surrounding area, burned vegetation over an area roughly the size of a traditional ger base, and created a deep crater where it embedded into the ground.
Named “Kherlen,” the meteorite weighs 32.7 kg and measures approximately 2 meters in length and over 1 meter in width. It has a rounded, relatively thin form with a glossy, enamel-like underside. Its appearance is glassy, brownish-green in color, and it is a lightweight yet hard metal rock.
Similar meteorites had previously been found in countries such as former Czechoslovakia, former Soviet Union, the United States, Ivory Coast, South Asia, and Australia. However, since none had been directly observed falling, scientists had long debated whether they were truly meteorites. The “Kherlen” meteorite provided crucial evidence which confirmed that such tektites are indeed of extraterrestrial origin.
Additionally, in 1969, samples of lunar soil brought back to Earth during the Apollo 11 Moon Landing contained rock material with a composition similar to these glassy meteorites.
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Cabinet Adopts Measures to Improve Vegetable Supply, Support Farmers www.montsame.mn
At its meeting on April 8, 2026, the Cabinet adopted a series of measures to be implemented in the agriculture sector. Minister of Food, Agriculture, and Light Industry Iderbat Tsagaankhuu emphasized that the government will place special focus on ensuring the normal operation of the crop farming sector and supporting its sustainable development.
The government has issued a resolution and official directives with a comprehensive scope aimed at improving and increasing the supply of vegetables. Within this framework, several major decisions have been made in the crop farming sector. In particular, governors of the capital and aimag have been tasked with accelerating land management reforms and ensuring that vegetable growers fully exercise the rights stipulated under Mongolia’s land law.
“In response to current conditions, MNT 1 billion in financing has been approved to improve the availability and quality of vegetables. This funding will be used to purchase seeds for four types of vegetables, which will be provided to farmers at discounted prices and on credit terms. Although the allocation is valued at MNT 1 billion in seeds, once planted and harvested, it is expected to yield up to 19,000 tonnes of vegetables.
The government has also decided to place special emphasis on both summer and winter greenhouse farming. For summer greenhouses, MNT 2.1 billion will be allocated for procurement, and citizens engaged in this activity will be offered long-term, interest-free loans. For winter greenhouses, where heating is the main challenge and relies on electricity, electricity tariff discounts will be provided, amounting to over MNT 400 million in support,” the minister said.
The Cabinet also decided to supply 10,000 tons of fuel required for spring planting at discounted prices. The sector will internally manage related financial constraints, while approximately MNT 16 billion from the 2026 budget package will be allocated to ensure normal spring planting operations. Minister Iderbat noted that as spring planting begins in May and harvesting takes place in autumn, preparations for machinery and materials required for autumn harvesting will be ensured in advance in cooperation with the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources.
The minister also noted recommendations have been issued to the Bank of Mongolia to urgently make available MNT 130 billion in loan financing. “Businesses have reported difficulties accessing loans from commercial banks due to a lack of available funding. This issue was also raised during a meeting in Darkhan. Therefore, recommendations have been given to the Governor of the Bank of Mongolia to apply flexible conditions to enterprises facing financial difficulties due to drought and other force majeure factors,” he said.
In addition, the government will focus on expanding agricultural exports and better utilizing opportunities under trade agreements Mongolia has signed with five countries in the Eurasian region.
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Mongolian civil servants allowed to work remotely 1 day per week www.xinhuanet.com
The Mongolian government on Wednesday decided to allow civil servants to work remotely for one day out of the five-day workweek, said the government's press office.
The decision was made during the government's regular cabinet meeting, the press office said.
In addition, working either part-time or full-time on weekends is discouraged for civil servants.
The government believes the measure will be economically efficient and help improve both job satisfaction and productivity among civil servants.
According to official data, as of 2025, more than 213,600 civil servants are employed across 4,330 public organizations in Mongolia, which has a population of 3.5 million.
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Mongolia cancels state inspections to boost economy www.xinhuanet.com
The Mongolian government on Wednesday decided to cancel planned state inspections at 9,376 sites owned by citizens, businesses, and organizations, according to the government's press office.
The decision was made during the first regular meeting of the country's new coalition government. The press office stated that the move is part of the government's "Liberate" initiative, which aims to stimulate the economy by reducing administrative burdens and supporting citizens and enterprises during a challenging period.
According to the statement, data from inspections conducted in 2024 and 2025 showed that some organizations were inspected more than 30 times per year.
Mongolia's new coalition government was sworn in last week. It is led by newly appointed Prime Minister Nyam-Osor Uchral, chairman of the ruling Mongolian People's Party (MPP), and includes the MPP, the opposition Hun Party, and the National Coalition.
The political transition followed the resignation of former Prime Minister Gombojav Zandanshatar, who stepped down at his own request late last month.A
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