Vietnam to ask Formosa to change
technology in wake of fish death scandal
People are pictured
near the wastewater treatment area at the Formosa steel plant in Ha Tinh,
located in north-central Vietnam. Tuoi Tre
Taiwan’s
Formosa Plastics Group must replace the current technology at its Vietnamese
steel making plant, which was responsible for killing dozens of metric tons of fish, Vietnam’s science
ministry said on Tuesday.
Vietnam will closely
oversee the technology change at the Formosa steel mill in the north-central
province of Ha Tinh, which is also part of a five-point commitment the Taiwanese firm has made
after its role in the environmental disaster was revealed last week.
“Under our supervision,
Formosa will have to change some types of technology at their steel mill, in
line with what their leaders had promised,” Deputy Minister of Science and
Technology Pham Cong Tac said at a ministry press briefing in Hanoi.
The Vietnamese government
announced on June 30 the results of a two-month inspection into the mass fish
deaths observed between April and May along the coast of Ha Tinh and three
other provinces, Quang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue.
The investigation, with
more than 100 scientists involved, found that untreated wastewater from the
Ha Tinh steel plant of Formosa, containing such toxic substances as phenol,
cyanide and ferric hydroxide, had been dumped into
the ocean, leading to the fish deaths.
The Taiwanese admitted
its wrongdoing and made five commitments, including apologizing to Vietnam,
paying US$500 million in damages, and improving its steelmaking
technology.
Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Pham Cong Tac
Scientists have found
that the direct cause of the fish deaths was wastewater resulting from a
technology known as wet-quenching coke, in which the coke is sprayed with
water for cooling, resulting in high CO2 emissions and thermal energy loss.
In steelmaking, coke is
used as a fuel and as a reducing agent in smelting iron ore in a blast
furnace.
The Formosa plant in
Vietnam currently deploys these pieces of technology.
It is suggested that
Formosa switch to the dry-quenching coke method, in which coke is cooled
using an inert gas, to avoid repeating its mistake.
Passing the
buck
Formosa had initially
intended to apply the dry cooling technology, but eventually adapted the
wet-quenching method to save costs.
This leads to the
question as to which Vietnamese bodies are responsible for allowing the use
of the polluting technology at the steel plant in Ha Tinh.
The answer from the
science ministry, giving by a top official at the same meeting in Hanoi, was
“it wasn’t me.”
Do Hoai Nam, head of the
technology evaluation and assessment agency within the science ministry, told
reporters that the ‘role allocation’ in the case of the Formosa project is
clear.
The science ministry only
had a role in the prefeasibility study, whereas the Ha Tinh administration
was responsible for issuing the investment approval and the Ministry of
Industry and Trade was accountable for backing the technology plan of the
Taiwanese developer, Nam elaborated.
Nam said when the Ha Tinh
administration sought advice from the science ministry on the technology plan
of the Formosa steel mill, the response was that the blast furnace technology
the Taiwanese proposed using is “common, but not modern, in the world.”
“As the project was at
that time in the prefeasibility stage, we could not say anything more
specific,” Nam explained.
The wastewater discharge canal at the Formosa steel plant
The official then
confirmed that it was the industry ministry that eventually approved the
technology plan for Formosa.
“We were not directly
involved in the technology evaluation and assessment for [this] project,” he
underlined.
Interestingly enough, the
industry ministry also ducked responsibility for the incident as alleged by
its technology counterpart.
Asked about the statement
Nam made at the press meeting, Minister of Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh
asserted that his ministry never assessed the wet-quenching coke technology
or allowed Formosa to use it.
“It is not among the
designated functions of the Ministry of Industry and Trade to do so,” he
said. “Our ministry is not a [technology] evaluation agency.”
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Tư, 6 tháng 7, 2016
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