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Mongolia’s Mining Boom Is Helping It Go Green


High commodity prices and rising coal exports are propelling economic growth in Mongolia, allowing the country to develop its robust mineral resources, expand its services sector, and invest in green agriculture and energy.

Mongolia exported 31.7m tonnes of coal in 2022, an increase in volume of 102%, or 16m tonnes, from 2021 and an increase in export revenue of 135%, or $6.5bn, due to higher coal prices, according to data from the Mongolian Customs General Administration.


These figures undergirded economic growth of 4.7% in 2022, with Mongolia forecast to grow by 5.2% in 2023.

As the world’s largest landlocked country, Mongolia relies on China for roughly 80% of its exports, 60% of its imports and 40% of its GDP. It exported 29.8m tonnes of coal to China in 2022, which was up 104% from 2021 and accounted for 94% of Mongolia’s total coal exports.

China’s economic recovery in the first quarter of 2023 is enabling Mongolia’s cross-border trade with its southern neighbour to return to pre-pandemic levels. Mongolia exported 13.8m tonnes of coal – of which 13.5m tonnes went to China – from January to March, for a total of $2.2bn, up 232.2% year-on-year.

In February Mongolia also started conducting coal-trading contracts through auctions on the Mongolian Stock Exchange, ending the practice of direct contracts with foreign buyers. Using so-called border prices that factor in transport fees, the new electronic trading platform brings transparency and ease to the coal export process.

New rail connections

Recovery in coal exports has catalysed the construction of new railway projects to connect the country’s mines to the Chinese border.

Last September Mongolia inaugurated a 233-km railway from the Tavan Tolgoi coal field to the Chinese border that will have the capacity to transport 30m to 50m tonnes of coal to China per year and lower transport costs from $32 per tonne using truck delivery to $8 per tonne.

In November the country commissioned the railway link from Zuunbayan to Khangi to transport coal, iron ore and other bulk commodities, including from multinational mining company Rio Tinto’s Oyu Tolgoi project.

Several other shorter railway projects are also intended to facilitate cross-border trade with China.

For instance, construction began in May on a 7.1-km railway from the Mongolia border point Shivee Khuren to the Chinese border, which is expected to be completed by October and will facilitate coal and copper shipments.

Two other shorter border connections – from Gashuun Sukhait in Mongolia to Ganqimaodu in China and from Khangi to Mandula in China – are also mostly completed and will further facilitate cross-border trade.  

The construction of new railways is part of a larger strategy to link Mongolia to the broader region.

In May 2023 China and Mongolia agreed on a series of economic and transport initiatives to bolster Mongolia as a trade route for China-Russia trade. Mongolia accounts for roughly 90% of China-Russia freight, making a tri-nation economic corridor a key segment of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Mongolia relies on Russia for electricity, petrol, aviation fuel, liquefied petroleum gas and diesel, about 60% of which comes from its northern neighbour. With the spike in prices since 2021, stronger links with its main energy supplier could improve its deficit.

Talks have been ongoing since 2019 for a second natural gas pipeline from Russia to China, the 2600-km Power-of-Siberia 2, which would yield transit fees for Mongolia, as well as an oil pipeline from Russia to China through its territory.

Diversification efforts

In recent years Mongolia has taken steps to improve its domestic infrastructure to diversify its mining-based economy. Between 2016 and 2020 the government constructed a motorway system that connects all 21 provinces to the capital Ulaanbaatar.

Western sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 led to difficulty importing key supplies, including food, as well as the loss of valuable airline navigation fees as airlines that formerly flew over Russia and Mongolia between Europe and Asia have been forced to fly over the North Pole or along a more southerly route.

The conflict has caused a substantial rise in food prices, including for basic staples such as rice and flour, which are essential products for the country’s livestock herders.

To address food insecurity and diversify its economy, the government is keen to encourage more foreign investment from China in non-mining sectors.

In May Tuvdendorj Gendendorj, deputy minister of economy and development, called for greater investment in agriculture, including meat processing, dairy farming and raising goats for cashmere, as well as tourism.

The agriculture sector reached a seven-year high of 12% growth in 2022,…



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