Harsh Mongolian winter kills 700,000 head of livestock

Extreme weather ‘dzud’ has been freezing domesticated animals dead in their tracks

People riding horses with their eagles during the Spring Eagle Festival in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia.  Photograph: Byambasuren Byamba-Ochir/AFP/Getty Images
People riding horses with their eagles during the Spring Eagle Festival in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia. Photograph: Byambasuren Byamba-Ochir/AFP/Getty Images

Mongolia`s harsh winter has killed more than 700,000 heads of livestock this year, the highest toll since 2011, according to the country’s statistics bureau, with extreme weather freezing animals dead in their tracks.

Mongolia is in the midst of a winter phenomenon called a dzud, when extremely low temperatures and snow make it difficult for animals to survive.

"I've seen horses frozen while standing," said Ulaanbaatar livestock trader, Ganbaatar Burjaa. "This year's dzud has been very hard."

The 709,000 head of livestock lost in the first two months of the year is a toll five times higher than the same period last year, according to the National Statistics Office.

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Mongolia’s winters have destroyed the livelihoods of thousands of herders, forcing them to move to the capital, Ulaanbaatar, in search of work.

In total, 66 counties across 12 provinces are facing dzud conditions, with snowfall covering half the country, the National Emergency Management Agency said last week. The government has not declared a natural disaster.

Tuyaa Chimedbaldir, an official at the emergency management agency, said given the end of the winter was approaching, the toll this year was unlikely to be as bad as the winter of 2009-2010, when 9.7 million animals were killed.

“This time, the government has worked hard to prevent and reduce the risk of the dzud,” she said.

However, experts warn the dzud could still kill many animals, with a severe drought that hit 70 per cent of the country last summer leaving vast numbers of undernourished livestock weak and vulnerable.

According to the Mongolian Red Cross Society, thousands of families were unable to prepare feed to sustain their animals through the winter. The society has spent 1.2 billion tugrik ($500,000) to help 4,500 herder families.

“Mongolian herders did not purchase enough fodder, so the spring season might kill animals that are tired from the harsh winter,” said Bayarmaa Chimedtseren, a rangeland monitoring and evaluation specialist at the “Green Gold” animal health project run by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation.

About 229,000 Mongolian families depend on animal husbandry for their livelihood. The total number of livestock reached 66.2 million as of December 2017.

Overgrazing, the degeneration of rangeland and poor land management contribute to the severity of the dzud, Mr Chimedtseren said. - Reuters