Big business blamed for coffee plant-killing drought
Owners
of coffee plantations in the Central Highlands region are bemoaning their
dying plants, the dry season and dams built by the Hoang Anh Gia Lai
Corporation have been blamed for the situation.
Coffee plants dying from a lack of water
The growers said they often used water from Ia Cham Stream but
had recently found the stream is drying out. Families living close to Ia Cham
Stream have been able to save part of their coffee plantations, but families
further away face severe drought. Grower Le Van Viet said he had struggled to
find water in the past two weeks and feared his entire coffee plantation was
at threat.
Many people blame Tay Nguyen
Dairy Company, under Hoang Anh Gia Lai Corporation, for building a dam
upstream which they used to hoard water to feed the cows.
Nguyen Ngoc Thanh, manager of
the dairy farm, admitted that the Hoang Anh Gia Lai Corporation had built
dams and a pumping system on the Ia Cham Stream. However, he claimed they had
only tested the pumping system three times and had never used it to water the
newly-planted 45 hectares of pasture. "It's unfounded to say that we
caused the lack of water downstream," he said.
However Kien Lo, head of O
Gia Village said that each time the company had tested the system, they had
sucked the stream dry.
Ia Cham drying out
Ia Grai District vice chairman Phan Trung Tuong said they hadn't
received any reports about a dam being built from communal authorities.
According to Tuong, the Hoang Anh Gia Lai Corporation had installed two pumps
on the Ia Cham and Ia Dap streams. These two streams would provide water for
over 1,000 hectares of coffee and 14 hectares of rice. Because Ia Cham Stream
does not have enough water during the dry season so they had asked Hoang Anh
Gia Lai to not use the stream from January to April.
The Hoang Anh Gia Lai Corporation has been blamed for building a dam
on Ia Cham Stream
"We haven't allowed the
enterprise to use the water. We'll ask the communal authorities to provide a
report on the case," Tuong said.
Unseasonably warm weather has
been blamed for the drought in Ia Sao, Ia Grang and Ia Kha Town. Tran Trung
Thanh, vice director of Center for Hydro‑Meteorological Forecasting in
Central Highlands said last year saw half the usual rainfall of previous
years so there would be a more serious situation during the dry season.
dtinews.vn
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Thứ Sáu, 19 tháng 2, 2016
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