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<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Baasansuren D.</title><link>https://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com</link><description>RSS Feed for Baasansuren D.</description><atom:link rel="self" href="http://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com/rss.xml"></atom:link><language>en</language><lastBuildDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><item><title>The Future of Green Energy in Mongolia</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/38d9cd4d-8642-4a0e-bd97-e427c0adbbc9.jpg</link><description></description><pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/38d9cd4d-8642-4a0e-bd97-e427c0adbbc9.jpg</guid></item><item><title>How Ordinary People Understand Sustainable Development</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/79331293-d2f4-4806-9f62-9a2469c9e4d6.webp</link><description></description><pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/79331293-d2f4-4806-9f62-9a2469c9e4d6.webp</guid></item><item><title>Women in Media: A Personal Reflection</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/02565365-e491-469b-9a1e-9b2f63d8c6e8.jpg</link><description></description><pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/02565365-e491-469b-9a1e-9b2f63d8c6e8.jpg</guid></item><item><title>The Lives of Nomadic Herders in a Changing Climate</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/34082711-6a58-4d11-a617-1c1edd40bd94.jpg</link><description></description><pubDate>Fri, 19 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/34082711-6a58-4d11-a617-1c1edd40bd94.jpg</guid></item><item><title>A Decade of Breath: Air Pollution and Public Health in Ulaanbaatar</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/653ec344-41df-429d-a0bd-e54e1fa3c4c9.jpg</link><description></description><pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/653ec344-41df-429d-a0bd-e54e1fa3c4c9.jpg</guid></item><item><title>How Ordinary People Understand Sustainable Development</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/b083a1ba-9288-4820-b883-6e78cdadb137.jpg</link><description></description><pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/b083a1ba-9288-4820-b883-6e78cdadb137.jpg</guid></item><item><title>The Future of Green Energy in Mongolia</title><link>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/38d9cd4d-8642-4a0e-bd97-e427c0adbbc9.jpg</link><description>A Nation Poised for Transformation</description><pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://media.journoportfolio.com/users/479520/images/38d9cd4d-8642-4a0e-bd97-e427c0adbbc9.jpg</guid></item><item><title>How Ordinary People Understand Sustainable Development</title><link>https://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com/#/articles/3469530</link><description>Why the Concept Feels Distant — and How to Bring It Closer to Everyday Life
Why Sustainable Development Feels “Far Away”

For many people, sustainable development sounds like a technical, academic, or government-level concept. The terminology—renewable energy, carbon neutrality, environmental resilience—often feels unfamiliar. When language feels scientific, the idea itself becomes distant.

Many families, especially in Mongolia, don’t immediately see how sustainable development connects to the realities of their daily life. They may wonder:

“How does this help my heating bill in winter?”

“How does this affect the air my children breathe?”

“Isn’t sustainability something the government or big companies deal with?”

Short-term needs also shape perception. When people are focused on staying warm, paying rent, or buying food, long-term global concepts naturally feel less urgent.

Why Sustainable Development Actually Matters

Sustainable development becomes meaningful when its benefits are explained in simple, relatable terms. It is not just a global agenda—it improves everyday well-being.

It means:

cleaner air in winter,

safer drinking water,

stronger and healthier communities,

lower household energy costs,

a livable environment for future generations.

When people understand these connections, sustainability no longer feels far away. It becomes something that directly influences the quality of life.

Practical Actions Ordinary People Can Take

Sustainable development can begin at home. Even small habits create meaningful change when communities adopt them together.

People can:

reduce indoor pollution by improving insulation or using efficient stoves,

save electricity with LED lights and mindful energy use,

conserve water by fixing leaks or shortening showers,

reduce waste by using reusable bags and choosing products with less packaging,

support local food and local products,

join neighborhood clean-ups, tree-planting days, or community discussions.

These actions are simple, accessible, and realistic for daily life—even for families who feel sustainability is a distant concept.

Bringing Sustainability Closer to Mongolian Communities

To make sustainable development feel relevant, communication has to be simple, honest, and practical.

People connect more when:

the language is easy to understand,

the actions are achievable,

the benefits are felt in their home and neighborhood.

In Mongolia, where air pollution, heating costs, and resource use directly impact health and well-being, sustainability becomes not just a scientific idea but a daily necessity.

By showing real examples and offering realistic steps, we can help everyone see that sustainable development is not far away—it begins right where they live.</description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com/#/articles/3469530</guid></item><item><title>How Ordinary People Understand Sustainable Development</title><link>https://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com/#/articles/3469530</link><description>Why the Concept Feels Distant — and How to Bring It Closer to Everyday Life
Why Sustainable Development Feels “Far Away”

For many people, sustainable development sounds like a technical, academic, or government-level concept. The terminology—renewable energy, carbon neutrality, environmental resilience—often feels unfamiliar. When language feels scientific, the idea itself becomes distant.

Many families, especially in Mongolia, don’t immediately see how sustainable development connects to the realities of their daily life. They may wonder:

“How does this help my heating bill in winter?”

“How does this affect the air my children breathe?”

“Isn’t sustainability something the government or big companies deal with?”

Short-term needs also shape perception. When people are focused on staying warm, paying rent, or buying food, long-term global concepts naturally feel less urgent.

Why Sustainable Development Actually Matters

Sustainable development becomes meaningful when its benefits are explained in simple, relatable terms. It is not just a global agenda—it improves everyday well-being.

It means:

cleaner air in winter,

safer drinking water,

stronger and healthier communities,

lower household energy costs,

a livable environment for future generations.

When people understand these connections, sustainability no longer feels far away. It becomes something that directly influences the quality of life.

Practical Actions Ordinary People Can Take

Sustainable development can begin at home. Even small habits create meaningful change when communities adopt them together.

People can:

reduce indoor pollution by improving insulation or using efficient stoves,

save electricity with LED lights and mindful energy use,

conserve water by fixing leaks or shortening showers,

reduce waste by using reusable bags and choosing products with less packaging,

support local food and local products,

join neighborhood clean-ups, tree-planting days, or community discussions.

These actions are simple, accessible, and realistic for daily life—even for families who feel sustainability is a distant concept.

Bringing Sustainability Closer to Mongolian Communities

To make sustainable development feel relevant, communication has to be simple, honest, and practical.

People connect more when:

the language is easy to understand,

the actions are achievable,

the benefits are felt in their home and neighborhood.

In Mongolia, where air pollution, heating costs, and resource use directly impact health and well-being, sustainability becomes not just a scientific idea but a daily necessity.

By showing real examples and offering realistic steps, we can help everyone see that sustainable development is not far away—it begins right where they live.</description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://baasansurendarinchuluun.journoportfolio.com/#/articles/3469530</guid></item></channel></rss>