Saturday, June 9, 2012

Will another grassland bite the dust?


A recent series by National Public Radio on the mining boom in Mongolia brought to mind the story in our winter issue by Kayla Koether, who in 2010-11 spent five months in the country living with nomadic herders.  In her story she mentions the mining industry as one of the threats to a way of life and to the health of the grasslands that have supported herdsmen for centuries.   NPR’s series tells how mining jobs are drawing young people away from herding in a country where traditionally two out of every five Mongolians make their living herding goats, sheep, and camels.  Meanwhile, competition increases for underground water.  Herders need the water in times of drought, and the mining industry needs it to process its minerals.  Fears mount that an industry that might last no more than a hundred years will destroy grasslands that have endured for thousands of years.  A way of life would bite the dust as well.   Kayla lived with herders in the steppe region north of the main mining activity in the Gobi Provinces, which are a mix of desert and grasslands.  However, the effects of the mining boom reverberate through all of the grasslands.  We’ve made Kayla’s story available in a special reprint that you access online.


Here is a link to the NPR series.





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