Aspire Mining focuses on advancing site engineering and logistics solutions at Ovoot Coking Coal Project as it sits out COVID-19 lockdown in Mongolia
The company is awaiting the first opportunity to reconvene the required meeting to present its detailed environmental impact assessment for community comment and acceptance. Aspire director Bold Batamgalan oversees delivery of COVID protection supplies to Tsetserleg soum hospital following a period of quarantine isolation.
Aspire Mining Ltd (ASX:AKM) (FRA:WKU) has focused on advancing site engineering and logistics solutions for its Ovoot Coking Coal Project in Mongolia as it sits out the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown.
The company remains confident that the local community is supportive of mine development and is awaiting the first opportunity to reconvene a meeting required to present its detailed environmental impact assessment (DEIA) for comment and acceptance.
2021-04-22 12:54:17
Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/. The Falling Walls ENGAGEx Ulaanbaatar international event on The Future of Learning for science engager and outreach projects will take place on Friday 7 May, 2021 via Zoom.
The virtual event will bring together Mongolian and international perspectives on Science Engagement through digital education – from exchange platforms to Virtual Reality and distance learning – with special contributions from INWES in India, Namibia, and the UK, UNICEF Mongolia, the National University of Mongolia (NUM) and GMIT.
Falling Walls Engage is the global platform for Science Engagement, hosted by the Falling Walls Foundation in cooperation with Robert Bosch Stiftung. The mission of Falling Walls Engage is to inspire and connect creative individuals who engage communities and actively involve the public in science to impact both sides all around the world.
We Face Very Tough Challenges How Mongolia Typifies the Problems Posed to Small Countries by China s Rise msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Communicating change in a ‘land of extremes’ In Aurora MacRae-Crerar’s Penn Global Seminar, students are grappling with the impacts of a shifting and unpredictable climate in Mongolia. Yurts, known as gers in Mongolia, were the dwelling of choice during Aurora MacCrae-Crerar s biology doctoral studies there. Now an instructor in the Critical Writing Program, MacRae-Crerar was inspired to craft a Penn Global Seminar focused on how climate change is affecting the country. (Image: Peter Petraitis)
It was a beautiful morning in Mongolia’s Dalbai Valley the day that Aurora MacRae-Crerar was due to launch her doctoral field work. As a Penn graduate student in 2009, she and colleagues were getting ready to set up experiments to evaluate the effect of warming on plants and soil microbes. Then a huge snowstorm hit.