Environmentalists warn recent prolonged flooding in northern Quang Ninh Province has washed tonnes of coal dust and metal into Halong Bay, threatening its fragile ecosystem.
Hoa Chat Stream, which runs from the Thanh Cong coal mine through Ha Khanh Ward of Halong City is ink black.

Tailings and stockpiles are washing into several streams feeding Cua Luc River, which is next to Ha Long Bay.
Coal heavy water from Ha Tu and Nui Beo coal mines is pouring into Lo
Phong Stream before flowing into mangroves close to the Halong Bay.
Dang
Huy Hau, vice chairman of the Quang Ninh Provincial People’s Committee,
said that flooding washed a lot of mud and coal into streams. Local
authorities are struggling to deal with resulting environmental issues.
Nguyen Dinh Hue, from Vietnam National
University-Hanoi, said coal washed into the Halong Bay would cover
several areas along the shore, affecting the aesthetics of the bay and
damaging it's ecosystem.

Lo Phong Stream carries coal and mud to Halong Bay.
Nguyen Huu Huan, from the Institute of Oceanography under the Academy of Science and Technology of Vietnam, said the Halong Bay boasts not only special landscape, geological and geomophlogical values, but has unique biodiversity.
Recent research showed that Halong Bay receives about 25m cubic metres of household wastewater, more than 100m cubic metres of coal wastewater and runoff from local farms each year. Sediment is accumulating along the shorelines and the latest bout of flooding has worsened the situation.
Dtinews