Mongolia Chapter
Our Partnership in Mongolia
In 2019, the AQIQ program began developing it's first international partnership. In collaboration with and the Department of Environmental and Forest Engineering, the AQIQ Mongolia chapter was born! Training began in summer 2020, and we plan for NUM students to begin serving as high school mentors in Ulaanbaatar, the nation's capital city. Moving forward, Mongolian students will be able to share ideas with AQIQ students in babyÖ±²¥app, comparing the air quality issues facing eachÌıwhile enriching the experiences of both groups through cultural exchange.Ìı
Why Ulaanbaatar?
Many people living in and around Ulaanbaatar, the world's coldest capital city1, need to warm their homes however they can. Many Mongolians in the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar live in structures similar to yurts known as gers, where the main method of heating and cooking is burning coal. In addition to the large numbers of people burning coal and the harsh temperatures, Ulanbaatar is also situated in a narrow mountain valley,Ìıwhere inversion layers in the winter trap most of the pollution close to the Earth's surface2. Particulate matter is the pollutant of greatest concern.
References
1. World Atlas, 2017.
2. National Geographic, 2019.
Photo Credits: Public Lab Mongolia; MinInMongolia WordPress.
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