HA NOI (VNS) - Viet Nam lacks a comprehensive strategy to cope
with coastal erosion, which is recognised as one of the major consequences of
rising sea levels, experts have warned.
The speed of
erosion has increased year-on-year, with coasts being affected depending on
their structure and use by local residents, said Le Van Cong, Deputy Head of
the Viet Nam Administration of Seas and
Cong, who was
speaking at a recent workshop held in Ha Noi, added that between 15-30 metres
of coast was being lost per year in Thanh Hoa and Tien Giang provinces and
between 10-20 metres in
The stretches of
coastline that have suffered the most from coastal erosion since 1990 are
located in seven provinces of Binh Thuan, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Phu Yen,
Thanh Hoa and Thua Thien Hue.
Head of the
latter's Seas and Islands Division Dang Xuan Dung said, "The erosion has
posed a threat to lives of hundreds of local residents and their homes."
Thua Thien Hue now
has a 30-km stretch of eroded coastline, about one-third of which is extreme,
he said.
According to Cong,
the higher frequency and intensity of tropical storms, over exploitation of
sand and reef, and mangrove deforestation were to blame for the increase of
coastal erosion in the country.
Statistics
released by the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorology Forecasting showed that
a total of 246 tropical storms hit
Deputy Head of
Seas and Islands Administration Vu Si Tuan said that public awareness of
disaster mitigation was still limited and had worsened the situation.
"Financial
resources have not been enough to prevent coastal erosion," he said.
Overlapping and
inconsistent environmental protection policies had made it difficult for
authorised agencies to cope with coastal erosion, he added.
Director of the
Research Institute for the Management of Seas and Islands Vu Thanh Ca said,
"Resorts along the coastline have mushroomed, also raising the level of
coastal erosion."
Cong commented
that the Government had actively prepared to combat the problem, but its
efforts had been stalled by the economic slowdown and it was now relying on
international aid.
In the meantime,
he revealed the administration of seas and islands plans to complete the
National Report on Viet Nam Coastal Erosion, assessing the problems and
recommending solutions.
Cong said that a
pilot model to prevent coastal erosion is set to be implemented over a 102-km
stretch of eroded coastline in central
The commune has
lost about 20,000 square metres of land and 15,000 square metres of forest
due to coastal erosion since 2005.
The Coordinating
Body on the Seas of East Asia (COBSEA) Consultant Reynaldo Molina recommended
that
In 2009, COBSEA
helped
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Chủ Nhật, 21 tháng 7, 2013
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