ULAN BATOR, Oct. 6 (Xinhua) -- Climate change brings significant
risks to Mongolia, said Mongolian Prime Minister Ukhnaa Khurelsukh on
Friday when speaking at the parliament on the issues of population
resettlement and urban development in the country.
"The situation of rural-to-urban migration in Mongolia has been
intensifying due to climate-related natural disasters," he said, and the
consequent problems of rapid urbanization pose "significant risks to
our country, especially the capital of Ulan Bator."
"Particularly, the air and soil pollution in the capital of Ulan
Bator is expected to worsen. So, we need to pay more attention to
improving living conditions and increasing employment in other cities
and rural areas in order to mitigate the overconcentration of population
in the capital region," he said.
The average temperature now in Mongolia is up 2.10 degrees Celsius
from 1940, more than doubling the rise in average global temperature,
according to the United Nations Environment Programme.
The climate change is increasing the risk of natural disasters,
including droughts and the extreme winter weather known as "dzud" in
Mongolia.
Nearly 600,000 herders who lost their livestock during the dzuds have
migrated to Ulan Bator over the past three decades, showed official
data.
Mongolia has a population of 3.2 million, of which 66 percent live in urban areas, Khurelsukh said.
As of the end of 2017, Ulan Bator hosted 46 percent of Mongolia's population.
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