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Update news Vietnam environment
The noxious odour and level of mud in the To Lich River and West Lake in Hanoi have decreased dramatically since nano-bioreactor technology has been applied, according to a JETRO representative.
Binh Dien Wholesale Market in HCM City’s District 8 wants city authorities to help reduce the waste it produces.
HCM City People's Committee has asked related agencies to focus on dealing with canal and channel pollution and encroachment in the area.
Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Tran Hong Ha has visited the site and checked the water treatment project at the To Lich River.
Central Highlands Dak Nong Province's People’s Committee has fined a company VND130 million (US$5,600) for illegal sand mining, vov.vn online newspaper reported.
Instead of works for public interest, multistory buildings in Hanoi have arisen on land where factories and administration offices were located in the past.
With rapid urbanization, pollution caused by waste has become a threat to the sustainable development of Da Nang, considered the most livable city in Vietnam.
Phu Quoc authorities are considering radical solutions to fight against floods after the island incurred the biggest flood in its history last August.
Hanoi authorities have issued a plan to prevent and limit the use of plastic bags to 2020, with a view to 2025.
Making straws from coconut milk can help to reduce plastic waste and boost exports of coconut products.
Three national parks and a national reserve in Vietnam have been recognised as ASEAN heritage parks, raising the total number of ASEAN heritage parks in Vietnam to 10.
Gia Lai’s people are afraid that hydropower plants will deprive them of land, but investors continue to plan more and more hydropower projects.
Hồ Ra Ơi, a Vân Kiều ethnic minority man in the Central Highlands province of Đắk Krông, has his own unique way of protecting the forest.
Saying that private vehicles are the biggest source of pollution, Hanoi’s Mayor Nguyen Duc Chung supports the policy to recall old cars and motorbikes.
To date, China has completed 11 hydropower dams out of total 19 dams in the upper course of Mekong.
The plan to relocate polluting factories was initiated by HCM City authorities in 2002, but the results remain very modest.
Water supplied to hundreds of thousands of households in Hanoi that was contaminated by oil waste is now safe for drinking and cooking, according to Hanoi authorities.
Since it appears to be impossible for Vietnam to persuade Laos to stop building hydropower plants, Vietnam needs to minimize the negative impact.
Treating waste is not an easy task in Vietnam. A start-up has chosen for itself the tough job of connecting various parties for treating waste.
Many localities in Vietnam have faced serious white pollution or plastic pollution. Plastic debris is found everywhere.