MongoliaFishing
Mongolia's lakes and rivers teem with freshwater fish.
Mongolia has developed a small-scale fishing industry, to export
canned fish. Little information was available on the types and
the quantities of fish processed for export, but in 1986, the
total fish catch was 400 metric tons in live weight.
Industry
In 1924 Mongolian industry was limited to the Nalayh coal
mine, an electric power plant in Ulaanbaatar, and various
handicrafts. Gross industrial output (measured in constant 1967
prices), was 300,000 tugriks. Industry developed very slowly in
the first two decades of the Mongolian People's Republic,
primarily because Mongolia's benefactor, the Soviet Union,
provided few resources to invest in industrialization. With
Soviet advice, however, Mongolia adopted an industrial strategy
that was based on the exploitation of natural resources and
agriculture and it has followed this strategy since. The first
steps to develop industry began in the 1930s. In 1933 the Union
of Artisans was organized. In 1934 the Choybalsan industrial
combine, the flagship of Mongolian industry, began operating in
Ulaanbaatar. The combine, a joint Mongolian-Soviet company
transferred to Mongolian control in 1935, had its own power
plant, cloth factories, tanneries, and wool-scouring mill that
produced blankets, felt, footwear, leather coats, and soap. Coal
production at Nalayh rose in the 1930s, and in 1938 the narrowgauge railroad connecting the mine with the capital's powergenerating station was completed. In 1940 industry accounted for
8.5 percent, and construction for 0.8 percent, of national
income. Gross industrial output rose to 124.7 million tugriks.
Industry began to develop substantially after World War II,
when Soviet aid increased and Soviet-style central planning was
introduced, and, in the 1950s, when Chinese assistance started.
Most industrialization occurred in Ulaanbaatar; smaller food
combines and livestock-product processing plants were scattered
throughout the country. In the 1950s, major projects completed
with Soviet assistance included the modernization of the
Choybalsan industrial combine; the expansion of production at the
Nalayh coal mine; the opening of oil wells in Buyant-Uhaa (Sayn
Shand); and the construction of four felt-rolling mills, a water
supply plant, and leather-processing factories. Chinese aid was
given primarily in the form of construction projects; Chinese
laborers built roads, bridges, housing, and a hydroelectric power
plant. By 1960 industry and construction accounted for 14.6
percent and 6.7 percent, respectively, of national income. Gross
industrial output (in constant 1967 prices) was 676.8 million
tugriks.
Industrialization took a big step forward after 1960. Largescale investment by the Soviet Union and other East European
countries took place with Mongolia's entry into Comecon in 1962.
This assistance enabled Mongolia to diversify industry
geographically and sectorally. Major industrial centers were
built at Darhan and Choybalsan in the 1960s and at Erdenet and
Baga Nuur in the 1970s and the 1980s. After 1970 the scope of
industry expanded beyond processing of agricultural products;
exploitation of minerals developed on a large scale, and the
energy and the construction industries, which supported such
development, also grew. In 1970 industry and construction
accounted for 22.6 percent and 5.8 percent of national income,
respectively; in 1985 they accounted for 32.4 and 4.9 percent of
national income, respectively. Gross industrial output (in
constant 1967 prices) was 1,733.2 million tugriks in 1970 and
6,244.4 million tugriks in 1985.
In the late 1980s, industry was concentrated in several urban
centers. Baga Nuur was a coal-mining and energy production
center. Bor Ondor produced fluorite. Choybalsan had a coal mine,
a meat-packing plant, a foodstuffs combine, and a wool-scouring
mill. Darhan was close to the Sharin Gol coal mine and produced
construction materials, foodstuffs, and light industrial
products. Erdenet, home of the copper and molybdenum processing
combine, also manufactured carpets and processed timber. Hotol
was the location of major limestone deposits and a cement
production center. Ulaanbaatar, the oldest industrial center,
specialized in coal and energy production, food processing,
livestock-product processing, and textiles
(see
fig. 10;
fig. 11).
Figure 11. Industry, 1985
Source: Based on information from USSR, Council of Ministers,
Main Administration of Geodesy and Cartography, Mongolskaia
Narodnaia Respublika, ekonomicheskaia karta dlia srednei
shkoly (Mongolian People's Republic Economic Map for the
Middle School), Moscow, 1985.
Changes in government organizations responsible for industry
reflected the regime's efforts to spur industrial development. In
1968 the Ministry of Industry, originally established in 1938,
was abolished; the Ministry of Food Industry was transformed into
the Ministry of Food and Light Industries. That same year, the
Ministry of Geology became the Ministry of Fuel, Power, and
Geology. In 1972 the Ministry of Food and Light Industries
established industrial producers' associations modeled on Soviet
producers' associations. The industrial producers's asociations
grouped ministry enterprises according to their specialization in
clothing, flour and fodder, footwear, hides and skins, and wool.
In 1976 the Ministry of Fuel, Power, and Geology was divided into
the Ministry of Fuel and Power Industry and the Ministry of
Geology and Mining. In 1986 the Ministry of Construction and
Construction Materials Industry and the State Committee for
Construction, Architecture, and Technical Control were dissolved,
and the State Construction Committee was established. In December
1987, the Ministry of Forestry and Woodworking, the Ministry of
Geology and Mining, the Ministry of Fuel and Power Industry, and
the Ministry of Food and Light Industries were replaced by the
Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry, the Ministry of Light
Industry, and the Ministry of Power, Mining Industry, and
Geology. Government organizations also concerned with industry in
the late 1980s were the State Construction Committee and the
Ministry of Social Economy and Services, formed in 1972 to
supervise handicraft production and the artels, or
handicraft producers' associations.
The Ministry of Environmental Protection also was formed in
1987 out of the Forestry and Hunting Economy Section of the
Ministry of Forestry and Woodworking, the State Land and Water
Utilization and Protection Service of the Ministry of
Agriculture, and the Main Hydrometeorological Administration of
the Council of Ministers; it dealt with industrial pollution.
Environmental degradation of the Hovsgol Nuur-Selenge Moron-Lake
Baykal ecosystem was a concern of both Mongolian and Soviet
authorities. To limit ecological damage, the Ministry of
Environmental Protection took steps to close the Hatgal woolscouring mill on Hovsgol Nuur, to end shipping of gas and oil in
the summer, and to cease carbon-monoxide-producing motor
transportation across the ice during the winter. Plans to open
the Urandosh strip mine on the banks of Hovsgol Nuur also were
postponed. Other measures to alleviate environmental pollution
included closing thermal power stations in Ulaanbaatar and moving
industrial facilities outside the city in order to reduce air
pollution. Strip mining in Mongolia--particularly at the Baga
Nuur, Erdenet, and Sharin Gol mines--had created large slag heaps
of concern to environmentalists. Other sources of ecological
degradation were the dumping of industrial, agricultural, and
household waste into small rivers and lakes.
Data as of June 1989
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