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Mongolia Daily: Cabinet reviews gas pipeline, police anti-drug unit spun off, and FICO replaces blacklists

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Politics

Cabinet Reviews Gas Pipeline Project, Cross-Border Economic Zone Plan, and Anti-Corruption Measures

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s Cabinet convened at 08:00 to review a packed agenda centered on regional connectivity, governance, and public sector reforms. Items include progress on the Russia–China natural gas pipeline traversing Mongolia and next steps; a master plan to jointly develop the Zamyn-Uud–Erenhot cross-border economic cooperation zone; and an evaluation report on the 2021–2025 national development plan. The government is also set to consider steps to improve the Corruption Perceptions Index, adjustments to budget investment resolutions, and structural changes for the national police organization. Proposals include revising allowances for emergency service personnel by 40%, and approving a special procedure to explore and use common minerals for road and rail projects. Authorities will discuss a national e-platform for citizen proposals. Outcomes could influence infrastructure timelines, trade facilitation with China, and administrative reforms affecting public services and investment execution.

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Emergency Staff Allowance Raised to 40% as Police Anti-Drug Unit Becomes Standalone Agency

Published: 2025-09-10

The Cabinet approved a 10-point increase to the “special duty conditions” allowance for emergency service personnel—from 30% to 40% of base monthly salary—effective January 1, 2026, with funding to be included annually in the state budget. The move follows a rise in disaster frequency and workload; from 2020–2025, authorities recorded 25,095 incidents causing 3,422 deaths and MNT 11.27 trillion in losses. In parallel, the government expanded the National Police Agency’s Anti-Narcotics Department into an independent unit, pending broader legal amendments, and retitled two investigative divisions. Officials cite a 4.5% year-on-year increase in drug-related crimes in H1 2025, with 51% of suspects aged 13–25. These steps signal a dual focus on emergency response capacity and narcotics enforcement structure, with budgetary and legislative follow-through required.

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Parliament Sets Oversight Hearing on Khovd’s Khulzan Buregtei Deposit as Locals Seek 50 Seats

Published: 2025-09-10

Parliament scheduled a general oversight hearing on September 23 to examine environmental impacts and risks at the Khulzan Buregtei deposit in Khovd’s Myangad soum. A delegation led by MP and hearing chair B. Bayarmagnai reviewed site conditions and met local officials, civil society groups, and residents on September 7–8. Community representatives requested that 50 residents from Myangad and local NGOs be admitted to the hearing. Exploration began in October 2022 but was halted by a Khovd Governor’s order in early 2024 following mounting protests, reflecting sustained local opposition to the project’s development. The Secretariat will accept attendance requests and submissions until 17:00 on September 18 via [email protected] and 51-261240. The hearing aims to assess legal compliance, hear agency briefings, and deliver findings to the State Great Khural.

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Energy Reform Debate Flags Policy Fragmentation and Political Interference in Tariffs

Published: 2025-09-10

At a forum on the future of energy reforms, MP S. Tsenguun outlined structural and political barriers he says are driving Mongolia’s power sector crisis. He noted that while the Oyun-Erdene government set goals to liberalize pricing, bring in private participation, and expand generation and distribution, pricing remains controlled and new private investment channels are still blocked. Multiple bodies—the Energy Ministry, a National Energy Reform Committee, and a parliamentary working group drafting a revised Energy Law—now overlap, blurring decision-making authority and delaying action. Tsenguun argued that political restrictions on tariffs have undermined safety and operations at aging thermal plants, citing repeated incidents at TPP-3 and elevated outage risks.

"Energy has been used as a political tool rather than managed as consumption based on real calculations, leading to today’s crisis." - MP S. Tsenguun (gogo.mn)

"With tariffs barred from being set freely, TPP-3 has suffered repeated explosions." - MP S. Tsenguun (gogo.mn)

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Budget Law Tightened: Officials Liable for Debts from Poor Execution Face Removal

Published: 2025-09-10

Parliament approved amendments to the Law on the Budget alongside changes to the 2025 state budget framework, tightening fiscal discipline and aligning all budgeting processes with the Medium-Term Fiscal Framework (MTFF). The revisions mandate a unified system for budget planning, execution, accounting, and reporting to match the MTFF approved by the State Great Khural. Local budgets must now be adopted and implemented without deficits in line with the MTFF and annual budget law. Crucially, budget governors who create receivables or payables by mismanaging approved annual budgets can be dismissed under the new legal basis. The measures aim to improve efficiency, boost state-sector productivity, and enforce accountability in public finance management, signaling stricter oversight for both central and local budget holders.

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State-Owned Firms to Face Performance-Based Pay and Accountability Overhaul

Published: 2025-09-10

The government will categorize state-owned enterprises (SOEs) by profitability and scrap uniform pay practices, shifting to performance-based compensation and accountability. Cabinet Chief of Staff S. Byambatsogt said profit-driven SOEs such as Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi and Erdenet will have clear targets tied to quarterly and annual bonuses for managers, while essential service providers with constrained tariffs—power companies, Baganuur and Shivee-Ovoo coal mines, and road maintenance agencies—will be assessed under different benchmarks to avoid tariff shocks and service disruptions. The policy aims to end guaranteed salaries regardless of outcomes and introduce consequences for losses, including dismissals. This marks a push to align commercial SOEs with market incentives while shielding regulated utilities and public service entities from inappropriate profit requirements.

"We will abolish the blanket salary system. If results are delivered, bonuses will be substantial; if losses persist, managers will be relieved of duty." - S. Byambatsogt, Head of Cabinet Secretariat (ikon.mn)

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Economy

Credit “Blacklists” Removed as FICO Scoring Becomes Official Basis for Lending Decisions

Published: 2025-09-10

From September 10, 2025, lenders in Mongolia will stop displaying “past-due” blacklist flags in credit reports and shift to risk-based lending anchored by FICO credit scores. Implemented via amendments to the Credit Information Law, the reform prioritizes transparent data use and consumer rights while enabling dynamic assessment of repayment behavior, current status, and risk. Sainscore, licensed by the Bank of Mongolia since 2021, deployed FICO scoring locally in September 2024 and now serves 600+ institutions; over 135 banks and non-bank lenders reportedly use the score. FICO ranges from 300–850 and weights repayment history (35%), balances (30%), length of credit (15%), mix (10%), and new inquiries (10). The move is expected to expand access to appropriately priced credit, improve portfolio quality, and standardize consumer recourse to check and correct data via Sainscore and e-Mongolia channels.

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ETT Coal Sales and Exports Accelerate Under Temporary Special Regime

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s state-owned Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi (ETT) has sharply increased sales and exports since a three‑month special regime took effect on July 9. Monthly coal sales rose from a 1.7 million‑ton average in H1 2025 to 2.7 million tons in July–August (1.6x). In August, 2.1 million tons were traded via 26 exchange auctions valued at $116.6 million, while exchange‑channeled exports reached 739,000 tons—double the prior month. Officials report logistics optimization cut delivery times two to threefold and revived 11 of 29 stalled 2023–2024 contracts. Performance gains over the first two months include higher average monthly sales (1.6x), exchange deliveries (1.5x), exports (1.2x), revenue (1.3x), and output (1.1x).

"The conditions that prompted the special regime are essentially being resolved." - U. Byambasuren, Head of the Government’s Special Representative Team at ETT (ikon.mn)

Authorities also ordered intensified talks with buyers who halted loadings on previously high‑priced exchange contracts and measures to sustain trading, shipments, and project execution.

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Critical Minerals Push Positions Country as Alternative to China’s Supply Chain

Published: 2025-09-10

"We will focus on battery minerals such as graphite and lithium; copper will remain essential for transmission and renewables." - Prof. Jeff Caers, Stanford University (urug.mn)

As demand for critical minerals accelerates across clean energy, defense, and advanced manufacturing, Mongolia is being framed as a potential reliable source to diversify away from China, which supplied about 80% of rare earths in 2023. The country’s indicated reserves total 3.2 million tons, with prospective resources of 31 million tons—over 16% of global resources—drawing interest from EU partners seeking supply security. Data-led exploration and AI are highlighted to fast-track discoveries, while building processing and supply chains could take 6–10 years, according to industry leaders. Engagements by European heads of state and signals from IMF meetings suggest growing international appetite for co-development and offtake arrangements.

"The key is data—training AI on Mongolia’s past exploration results to shorten discovery-to-market timelines." - A. Munkhbadral, Nomadic X project member (urug.mn)

"New supply chains and plants will likely need up to 10 years to meaningfully cut reliance on China." - M. Dagva, Head of the Mongolian Critical Minerals Association (urug.mn)

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Mining Week & MinePro 2025 to Open in Nalaikh, Showcasing Investment and Responsible Mining

Published: 2025-09-10

The annual Mining Week & MinePro 2025 opens tomorrow at the foot of Taij Khairkhan in Ulaanbaatar’s Nalaikh District, running three days under the theme “A New Cycle in Minerals: Investment and Responsible Mining.” Co-organized by the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources and the Mongolian National Mining Association, the event convenes MPs, government officials, diplomatic missions, international organizations, investors, chambers, and industry experts. The program spans sustainable policy, investment outlook, global trends, geology and exploration, new energy, oil sector challenges, and advanced technologies—positioning the forum as a platform to align industrial supply chains and policy direction. The MinePro 2025 expo will connect suppliers, major projects, financiers, and consultancy/tech providers for deal-making. A mining jobs fair will run onsite. The final day features a youth-focused “Future Engineers” event and a cultural sports festival with archery, knuckle-bone shooting, and wrestling.

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Fuel Price Pressures Loom in Western Provinces as Russian Supply Tightens

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia sources all gasoline and diesel from Russia, largely via Rosneft’s Angarsk refinery, which undergoes annual maintenance in August. To protect harvest operations, Mongolia requested a deferral of routine repairs, which Russia accepted. However, drone strikes on several refineries in western Russia have tightened domestic supply and lifted prices there. While Mongolia currently benefits from intergovernmental terms that keep import prices below Moscow’s retail levels, importers warn this cushion may erode next year as Russian fuel prices rise and subsidies for small suppliers and transporters are halted, likely pushing wholesale and retail prices higher, particularly in western aimags. As of September 1, pump prices stood at MNT 2,940–3,040 for diesel, MNT 2,315–2,370 for AI-76/80, MNT 2,590 for AI-92/93, and MNT 3,510–3,610 for AI-95. The risk is upward pressure on logistics costs and inflation-sensitive sectors like agriculture and mining.

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Regulatory Easing Spurs Corporate Bonds as Shunkhlai and Suu Tap Market

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s Financial Regulatory Commission (FRC) has amended its debt instrument registration rules to accelerate corporate access to bond financing. Following the changes, Shunkhlai LLC issued an A-rated, MNT 50 billion open bond last week, while Suu JSC began bond trading and raised MNT 5 billion. The FRC expects more large domestic firms to tap the market as issuance up to MNT 5 billion can proceed without collateral, guarantees, or an underwriter, and applications must be decided within 10 working days. Companies can also register full programs and issue in tranches. These adjustments reduce issuance friction and timelines, potentially broadening funding sources beyond bank loans and supporting expansion in consumer goods, retail, and logistics. The shift could deepen market liquidity and set a precedent for programmatic bond issuance among Top-100 enterprises.

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Korean Construction and Food Equipment Firms Explore Partnerships in Ulaanbaatar

Published: 2025-09-10

South Korean manufacturers in construction and food-processing equipment met Mongolian producers in Ulaanbaatar to discuss long-term cooperation and technology supply, including high-capacity concrete pumps, gas supply systems, fittings, and agricultural sector tools. The Mongolian National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MNCCI) framed the meetings as part of building durable business links and improving the trade environment between the two countries. Trade remains imbalanced: Mongolia exported $52.6 million to South Korea in 2024—mainly molybdenum concentrate and knitwear—while importing $482.3 million, led by trucks, tobacco, and petroleum products. Such sector-focused matchmaking could position Korean suppliers to support Mongolia’s urban construction and agri-processing upgrades, while offering Mongolian firms pathways to diversify exports and integrate equipment financing and maintenance arrangements.

"We appreciate ongoing business meetings as a way to reach long-term partnerships between the two countries' enterprises." - Ts. Magnai​baatar, CEO, Mongolian National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (montsame.mn)

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Prices Accelerate in August; Food and Housing Drive 4.6 Points of Annual Inflation

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s consumer prices rose 8.8% year-on-year in August 2025 and 1.6% from July, according to the National Statistics Office. Food, beverages, and water contributed 2.7 percentage points (30.4%) to the annual rate, while housing, utilities, electricity, and fuels added 1.9 points (21.3%). Goods prices increased 6.8% year-on-year and services climbed 14.9%, underscoring persistent services-led pressures. Within goods, food rose 9.8% and non-food 8.4%. The composition indicates broad-based increases with stronger momentum in services, often linked to wages and administered tariffs, which can be slower to reverse. Elevated food inflation suggests continued sensitivity to supply chains and seasonal factors. The data point to near-term pressure on household budgets and potential implications for monetary policy calibration if price momentum persists into autumn.

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Diplomacy

Kazakhstan’s Sovereign Fund and Kazatomprom Court Partnership on Uranium and Rare Earths During Mongolian Speaker’s Visit

Published: 2025-09-10

Kazakhstan’s Samruk-Kazyna sovereign wealth fund and uranium leader Kazatomprom signaled readiness to deepen cooperation with Mongolia on uranium and rare earths during Speaker D. Amarbayasgalan’s official visit. The outreach follows Mongolia’s new sovereign wealth fund law (April 2024) and a January 2025 investment deal with France’s Orano, reviving a long-stalled uranium project. Kazatomprom, which accounts for 20% of global supply and operates 14 of Kazakhstan’s 27 uranium deposits, sees demand doubling by 2040 and highlighted in-situ recovery expertise applicable to Mongolia’s similar geology. Ulaanbaatar is exploring joint exploration, processing, and potential domestic energy expansion tied to exports to China, alongside broader minerals processing projects.

"We are ready to launch joint exploration and build a processing plant in partnership with Mon-Atom; cooperation can also extend to rare earths." - D. Amarbayasgalan, Speaker of Parliament (gogo.mn)

"If supported, we are prepared to establish a joint venture in Mongolia under existing intergovernmental agreements on uranium." - Nurlan Zhakupov, Chairman of the Management Board, Samruk-Kazyna (gogo.mn)

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Nepal Unrest Leaves 19 Dead as Mongolia Confirms Six Nationals Safe; Embassy Maintains Contact

Published: 2025-09-10

Protests led by Nepal’s Gen Z escalated into deadly clashes after the government restricted 26 social media platforms, drawing criticism over perceived elite privilege. Media reports cite at least 19 fatalities, over 400 injuries, and arson at parliament and media buildings, followed by Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli’s resignation. Mongolia’s Foreign Ministry (MFA) said six Mongolian nationals are in Nepal—four adults in hotels with food supplies intact and two children studying at a religious school—while the Honorary Consul in Nepal and the Embassy in New Delhi are in regular contact. Authorities say the children’s guardian-teacher is coordinating communications and no immediate risk is reported. These updates indicate limited disruption to Mongolian citizens and sustained consular support as Nepal’s political situation remains fluid. No direct evacuation measures were announced in the reports.

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Provisional Free Trade Deal with EAEU Heads to Parliament, Promising Tariff Cuts and Export Openings

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s provisional Free Trade Agreement with the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) will be submitted to the autumn session of Parliament for ratification, after which all five EAEU members must complete domestic procedures before it takes effect for an initial three years. The deal would remove EAEU import tariffs on 367 Mongolian products—previously facing 15–50% rates—while Mongolia grants full or partial tariff relief on 367 items, with quotas or partial cuts maintained for some food goods to protect local producers. Officials say the pact should lower costs for fuel, fertilizers, machinery, and steel inputs not made domestically, and expand access to a 190 million–person market with significant demand for meat, leather, and cashmere products.

"We must prepare domestically to meet sanitary and phytosanitary and other non-tariff standards to fully benefit from the agreement." - I. Batkhüü, State Secretary, Ministry of Economy and Development (gogo.mn)

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Infrastructure

Energy Minister Warns of Possible Winter Power Limits as Load Growth Outpaces Capacity

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s energy ministry signaled potential electricity curbs this winter and next if demand exceeds last year’s peak, despite ongoing preparations and recent capacity additions. System readiness is mixed: thermal plants 61%, transmission/distribution 63%, heat networks 72%, and coal mines 65–101.7%, with overall winter prep at roughly 71%. Demand continues to rise 6–7% annually, reaching about 11% during winter peaks, while 24.6% of consumption still relies on imports even when domestic sources run at full capacity. Ulaanbaatar accounts for 64.8% of electricity use and faces heating constraints during severe cold, intensifying the need for network upgrades and new generation near DCS-2 and DCS-3. The ministry expects Bөөрөлжүүт to offset a 50 MW shortfall at DCS-3 and is advancing new projects and tenders.

"If winter demand surpasses last year’s levels, limited power restrictions cannot be ruled out; if it does not, we can likely get through winter without outages." - Energy Minister B. Choijilsuren (eagle.mn, itoim.mn)

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Ulaanbaatar Closes City Center for Car‑Free Day; 43 Bus Routes Rerouted, Some Suspended

Published: 2025-09-10

Ulaanbaatar will stage “Car‑Free Day 2025” on Saturday, September 13, closing central roads from 07:00 to 18:00 and suspending operations at major markets. Public transport will bypass the city core, with route changes affecting 43 lines and 459 buses. Key adjustments include rerouting services around Ikh Toiruu and Bayanburd to reconnect at major intersections; east–west lines will loop via Sansar Circle, Bayanburd, and West Four Roads. Three lines will not operate: Ch29B (Vokzal–East Four Roads), Ch71A (Dunjingarav–MUIS), and Ch78 (Sukhbaatar Square–Infectious Diseases Hospital). Normal service resumes after 18:00. Health screenings and public events are planned on Sukhbaatar Square during the closure, aligning with the city’s safety and wellness theme.

"On September 13, central roads will be closed for Car‑Free Day, so 43 bus routes will operate on altered paths from 07:00 to 18:00, with normal service resuming after the roads reopen." - Specialist, Public Transport Policy Department (ikon.mn)

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Erdenes Mongol to Review Feasibility Study for 300 MW Ulaanbadrakh Power Plant

Published: 2025-09-10

Erdenes Mongol’s professional council is set to review the completed feasibility study for a 300 MW thermal power plant planned at the Baruun Dalai deposit in Ulaanbadrakh, Dornogovi. Project due diligence is reported at 65% and the detailed environmental impact assessment at 40%, with “Khujirt Serten” LLC contracted for hydrogeological sampling. Developers aim to supply 1.46–1.89 billion kWh annually to the Central Energy System, a step framed as strengthening power security, reducing import dependence, and adding a stable baseload source. Following approval of a mineral exploitation license on July 22, the proponent has requested land use authorization from the Ulaanbadrakh Citizens’ Representative Khural and commissioned a mine surveying firm to register reserves. The review outcome will shape timelines for permitting, financing, and grid integration.

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Ulaanbaatar Car-Free Day Set for Saturday; Central Corridors Closed and E-scooters Banned for Safety

Published: 2025-09-10

Ulaanbaatar will hold its Car-Free Day on Saturday, September 13, from 07:00–18:00, closing key central arteries including the stretch from West Four Intersections to East Four Intersections and surrounding streets (Sükhbaatar Square area, Seoul St., Beijing St., parts of Peace Ave., among others). Authorities will prohibit entry of electric scooters, Surron-style e-motorbikes, mopeds, and motorcycles within the restricted zone, citing prior pedestrian injuries. Odd-numbered license plates may operate outside the car-free perimeter under the ongoing odd-even rule. Organizers will stage sports and cultural events and conduct air quality and noise measurements to benchmark impacts. Ulaanbaatar counts roughly 750,000 registered vehicles, with about 600,000 active daily, indicating high density and pollution exposure.

"We urge citizens to forgo cars—even for one day—as part of preventing environmental pollution in the city center and fostering healthier habits." - B. Byambadorj, Head of the Capital City Health Department (ikon.mn)

"For safety, we will not allow electric scooters, Surrons, or mopeds into the restricted zone." - Lt. Col. G. Otgontamir, Traffic Police Authority (eagle.mn)

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Ulaanbaatar Plans School Bus Program, Teacher Reassignment, and Registration Limits to Curb Traffic After Odd-Even Ends

Published: 2025-09-10

Ulaanbaatar will end its temporary odd-even license plate traffic rule next Thursday and pivot to three measures aimed at keeping congestion at school-holiday levels. City officials plan a dedicated school bus program for kindergarten and grades 1–5 to cut peak-hour parental car trips, with door-to-door pickup targeted from next year. They will also reassign teachers to schools within their home districts to reduce cross-city commuting. Additionally, authorities will restrict vehicle growth by halting new registrations for cars older than 10 years, while previously registered vehicles keep road access. The city is advancing long-term infrastructure options—ring and Tuul River expressways, and potentially metro or tram—to expand capacity and reduce emissions; cars account for an estimated 35% of air pollution.

"We are developing a school bus program for lower grades and will reallocate teachers within districts to lower daily cross-town travel. New license plates will not be issued to vehicles over 10 years old." - Deputy Mayor A. Amartuvshin (itoim.mn)

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Ulaanbaatar Submits 2026 Development Plan with 115 Human Development Projects and Major Roadworks

Published: 2025-09-10

Ulaanbaatar city has submitted its 2026 development plan for council approval, aligning with national and city programs through 2028. The plan organizes outcomes by sector and budget overseer, and earmarks funding for five policy pillars: MNT 9.29 trillion for regional development (170 projects), MNT 397.7 billion for human development (115 projects), MNT 552.2 billion for economic development (57 projects), MNT 651.3 billion for green development (56 projects), and MNT 42.8 billion for governance (51 projects). Authorities aim to advance major builds to 53% preparedness next year, continuing the Tuul River expressway and bridges, launching the first ring road, and adding 107 km to primary road networks with upgrades across main and secondary streets and residential lanes.

"We have prepared the draft of the capital’s 2026 development plan in line with the methodology for annual local plans," - T. Davaadalai, First Deputy Governor of Ulaanbaatar (gogo.mn)

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Ulaanbaatar-Japan Urban Development Ties Expand with Smart City, Drone Medical Pilot, and Underground Walkway Projects

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia’s construction and urban development minister E. Bat-Amgalan met Japan’s vice minister for Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Kenichi Ogasawara to advance public–private collaboration in urban planning, housing, and infrastructure. The sides discussed applying Japanese smart city practices to ease Ulaanbaatar’s congestion and pollution, including a pilot to transport blood donations and emergency medical supplies by drone between the National First Central Hospital and the National Center for Transfusion Medicine. They agreed to accelerate underground pedestrian infrastructure with integrated retail in peak-traffic zones via public–private investment. The governments also aim to channel more Mongolian engineers into the bilateral “1,000 Engineers” program and to expand short- and mid-term technical trainings. Japan’s long-term operations and management models will be introduced to wastewater treatment assets, including Ulaanbaatar’s central plant and facilities across 14 provinces. No direct quotes were provided in the source.

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Draft Heat Supply Law Seeks Metering, Decentralization, and Clearer Rules

Published: 2025-09-10

Parliamentarian M. Enkhtsetseg, who leads an energy reform task force, outlined a draft Heat Supply Law aimed at fixing fragmented regulation by separating heat from electricity governance, mandating heat meters, and easing permits for decentralized systems. The bill classifies heat supply into centralized, sectional, and independent, removing state licensing for independent and most sectional systems to spur private investment and reduce bureaucratic barriers. It also codifies tariff calculation transparency and local participation, replacing reliance on volatile ministerial regulations. Eight public consultations were held and 800+ stakeholder comments were incorporated. The law will proceed alongside a companion Electricity Supply bill.

"If we can’t measure heat, we can’t control or save it." - MP M. Enkhtsetseg (urug.mn)

"When citizens finance their own heating source, the state doesn’t need to intervene with licenses and tariff approvals." - MP M. Enkhtsetseg (urug.mn)

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Society

Court Rejects Travel Ban on Assault Victim as Case Broadens to Include Minor Charge Against Him

Published: 2025-09-10

A district court declined a prosecutor’s request to bar D. Sayannyambuu from leaving Mongolia, allowing him to continue scheduled treatment in South Korea following a July 19 group assault allegedly involving the sons of prominent businessmen and a former MP. Prosecutors had also designated Sayannyambuu a suspect for “intentional minor injury” under Criminal Code 11.6, a move his family says stems from a self‑defense incident during the attack. The main case—initially framed as a public order offense—remains under Sukhbaatar District Prosecutor’s Office, with questions unresolved about adding a narcotics-related charge. The father detailed severe injuries and ongoing surgeries, while noting the suspects’ families have apologized and covered medical costs.

"My son suffered injuries that won’t allow a full recovery; he needs ongoing medical supervision and further surgery in 6–8 months." - D. Dashzeveg, victim’s father (gogo.mn)

"A travel ban would have been excessively harsh; he has booked follow-up hospital visits and must continue treatment abroad." - D. Dashzeveg, victim’s father (eagle.mn)

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Pensioners Rally to Demand MNT 1.5 Million Minimum Pension, Submit Petition to PM’s Adviser

Published: 2025-09-10

Representatives of retirees held a demonstration in Ulaanbaatar, formally delivering a petition to Prime Minister’s adviser B. Davaadalai calling for the minimum pension to be raised to MNT 1.5 million. Current minimum payments reportedly stand at MNT 570,000–689,000, which protesters say are inadequate amid rising living and heating costs ahead of winter. The group highlighted fuel affordability as a pressure point, citing projected coal expenses for household heating.

"Today’s minimum pension of 570,000–689,000 tugriks is nowhere near enough to live on. This winter we’ll have to burn coking coal—one sack is said to cost 5,000 tugriks. How can we manage?" - Retiree demonstrators (gogo.mn)

The petition signals growing social pressure on the government to adjust pensions before the cold season, with potential fiscal implications if a large-scale increase is considered.

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Environment

Cold front to bring rain, mountain snow and strong winds nationwide from Sept. 12

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia will shift from mild conditions on Sept. 10–11 to a widespread cold snap beginning Sept. 12, with rain, mountain wet snow, and gusty winds across most regions through Sept. 14. Forecasts call for showers today in parts of the west, center, and northeast; Ulaanbaatar remains mostly cloudy with light rain and daytime highs around 18–20°C. A stronger system arrives Sept. 12–13, bringing precipitation to western and central provinces first, then most eastern and Gobi areas, including mountain snow in the Khangai, Khuvsgul, and Khentii ranges. Wind speeds may reach 15–17 m/s in many areas, with notable blowing snow risk in Govi-Altai. Temperatures will drop sharply from Sept. 14, with colder nights in high basins and mountain valleys.

"From September 12–13, conditions deteriorate, with wind and a notable temperature drop across much of the country." - Meteorologist B. Tsogtbaatar (itoim.mn)

"In the coming days, some parts of Govi-Altai will see snow and blowing conditions; winds may reach 15–17 m/s." - Local meteorological warning (montsame.mn)

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Ulaanbaatar Bans Raw Coal, Rolls Out Cleaner Fuel Sales with Fixed Prices

Published: 2025-09-10

Ulaanbaatar will fully ban raw coal use this winter and shift households to improved midling and semi-coke fuels, Deputy Mayor A. Amartuvshin announced. Sales of midling start citywide on Monday across 400 outlets, with semi-coke entering the market from October 1. Authorities plan to sell 40–45,000 tons of improved fuel and 306,000 tons of semi-coke, supplying an estimated 172,000 households. Distribution will avoid primary street-front lanes, relocating points to secondary and tertiary streets to reduce congestion and safety risks. Officials say foreign lab tests indicate significant emissions cuts versus prior improved fuels: sulfur gases down 89.2%, nitrogen oxides 72.6%, carbon monoxide 24.5%, and PM2.5/PM10 by 68%. Pricing is set at MNT 3,750 per 25 kg sack of midling and MNT 5,000 for semi-coke.

"We will not allow semi-coke sales on main street-front lanes; points will be placed away from sidewalks on secondary and tertiary streets." - Deputy Mayor A. Amartuvshin (unuudur.mn)

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Innovation

AI and Digitalization Summit to Advance Mineral Exploration Practices in Mongolia

Published: 2025-09-10

An international conference, “Digitalization & AI in Mining Geology 2025,” will be held on 10 September 2025 at the Chinggis Khaan National Museum conference hall in Ulaanbaatar, focusing on deploying artificial intelligence in geology and mineral exploration. Organizers aim to align AI-driven exploration methods with Mongolia’s mining strategy, ongoing legal reforms to the Minerals Law, and broader sustainability targets, including emissions reduction. The event is positioned to showcase advanced global technologies that can speed the discovery of critical mineral deposits and support the energy transition. If outcomes are realized, Mongolia could adopt AI-based exploration workflows, integrate them with policy updates, and strengthen its role as a regional hub for mining and tech collaboration. No named officials or direct policy statements were quoted in the article.

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Health

Government Tightens Controls and Moves to Stockpile Plague Vaccine as Huvsgul Outbreak Escalates

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia has escalated its response to a bubonic plague outbreak in Huvsgul Province, imposing strict movement restrictions and financing emergency measures from the Health Minister’s budget. Three cases are confirmed (one death), with 110+ close contacts under monitoring; the cluster is linked to handling raw marmot meat. Authorities report no spread to Ulaanbaatar or other provinces. Health facilities in Huvsgul have activated red zones and deployed two Russian-donated mobile labs to accelerate diagnostics. Vaccine supply remains a structural gap: procurement failed this year and Mongolia has had no recent stocks, as the vaccine is only produced in Russia and Ukraine and is not WHO-prequalified, limiting import options. The government plans to create a reserve supply for high-risk groups while reinforcing screening at road checkpoints.

"We will finance outbreak response needs from the minister’s budget and strengthen border and road checkpoint controls." - Health Minister J. Chinburen (montsame.mn)

"Plague vaccine exists, but Mongolia has had no supply in recent years; production is limited to Russia and Ukraine and does not meet WHO prequalification." - Health Minister J. Chinburen (eagle.mn)

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Khuvsgul Extends Murun and Tsagaan-Uul Travel Ban Three More Days as Plague Response Continues

Published: 2025-09-10

Khuvsgul province extended restrictions on outbound travel from Murun and Tsagaan-Uul for three days, now through 23:00 on September 13, as authorities manage a confirmed bubonic plague cluster. Provincial emergency officials also prolonged limits on Murun’s markets, restaurants, bars, and alcohol service to the same deadline. Health authorities reported no new confirmed human cases; tests on 44–45 recent samples were negative. Since a case was detected in Tsagaan-Uul on September 3, three infections have been confirmed, including one death, with two patients hospitalized (one moderate, one mild). Officials list 20 suspected cases, with one in serious condition, and 110 first-contact individuals isolated across facilities and home quarantine. Veterinary and public health measures include the culling of 156 marmots. Movement exemptions apply for documented humanitarian, official duty, and urgent medical reasons.

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Plague Case Triggers Hovsgol Lockdown and Mass Contact Tracing After Patient Hid Marmot Consumption

Published: 2025-09-10

Health Minister J. Chinburen reported that a confirmed bubonic plague case in Tsagaan-Uul soum was delayed in diagnosis after the patient sought care at multiple facilities without disclosing having eaten marmot meat, raising risks of nosocomial transmission. The patient’s family revealed the exposure only after the individual fell into a coma, enabling confirmation of the diagnosis. Authorities have placed 110 first-tier contacts under monitoring and maintained strict emergency measures: schools, kindergartens, commerce, and industry are suspended, and all outbound movement from Hovsgol province is halted through September 15. Mobile response teams and two field laboratories from Ulaanbaatar are accelerating bacteriological testing to shorten the 72-hour turnaround. Specialized national agencies (NCCD, NPHC, and the National Center for Zoonotic Diseases) are deployed on site.

"The patient did not disclose eating marmot meat, delaying diagnosis and creating a serious risk of internal transmission; the case was confirmed only after the family informed doctors when the patient fell into a coma." - Health Minister J. Chinburen (ikon.mn)

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Levemir Supply at Risk as Mongolia Moves to Import Emergency Stocks

Published: 2025-09-10

Mongolia faces a near-term shortage of Novo Nordisk’s insulin detemir (Levemir FlexPen), with less than one week of supply remaining, according to the General Agency for Medicines and Medical Devices. Other insulin products hold 45–102 days of stock, the agency said. The shortfall is linked to a temporary packaging-line capacity issue at Novo Nordisk, which reported no quality or safety concerns and pledged to resolve the disruption quickly. Authorities have instructed licensed distributors to secure emergency imports: 65,000 pens (about six months’ demand) are requested from Brazil via Monos Trade and Mongol Em Impex, with fast-track approval targeted for early October. Additional batches are scheduled for production and delivery—4,101 pens on September 16 and 8,000 on October 10. Public hospitals dispense insulin free under the national insurance scheme, but 50 facilities reported Levemir stockouts on September 5.

"There are no quality or safety issues; the situation will be resolved as soon as possible." - D. Oyungerdene, Senior Specialist, Drug Supply Department (unuudur.mn)

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Joint Japan–Mongolia project boosts zoonotic disease surveillance and confirms no bovine TB transmission to humans

Published: 2025-09-10

A five-year Japan–Mongolia health project has strengthened Mongolia’s capacity to detect and manage zoonotic diseases, unveiling new genomic laboratories and diagnostics under the One Health framework. Implemented by JICA and AMED through SATREPS (2020–2025), the program established a BSL-3 facility, next-generation sequencing, and rapid tests (dry LAMP, immunochromatography) for tuberculosis and glanders, while training over 20 specialists in Japan. Officials reported scientific evidence that bovine tuberculosis is not transmitting to humans in Mongolia, enabling the country to claim “freedom from bovine TB” to domestic and international stakeholders. The project also enhanced screening of imported racehorses and regional TB strain mapping, with Beijing lineage prevailing.

"The next pandemic is likely to emerge from zoonotic diseases, and this capacity improves our early detection and preparedness." - O. Batbayar, Deputy Director, National Center for Communicable Diseases (gogo.mn)

Findings will inform risk assessments for livestock movement and import controls, with ministries and the veterinary authority integrating results into policy.

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Arts

Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union General Assembly Opens in Ulaanbaatar with Focus on Cultural Heritage

Published: 2025-09-10

The Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU) will hold its General Assembly in Ulaanbaatar on September 11–15, hosted by Mongolian National Broadcaster MNB for the second time. Executives, producers, and creators from more than 40 countries—including Japan’s NHK, China’s CGTN, Korea’s KBS, Turkey’s TRT, and outlets from Australia and Italy—will discuss industry trends and challenges. This year’s theme emphasizes the role of television, radio, and media in preserving and promoting national cultural heritage. The program includes the ABU Song Festival, with artists from around 10 countries; Mongolia will be represented by The Hu. Founded in 1964, ABU is the world’s largest broadcasting union, spanning 272 members across 76 countries on four continents, facilitating news exchanges, co-productions, legal and technical advisory, and sports rights negotiations. The official proceedings of “ABU GENERAL ASSEMBLY-2025 ULAANBAATAR” begin Thursday.

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