Vietnam’s
Mekong Delta sinking at worrying rate: expert
Excessive use of groundwater is considered the primary reason
Subsidence and rising sea level are
threatening to sink the entirety of Vietnam’s Mekong Delta in the near future
if preventive measures are not carried out quickly, an expert has warned.
Nguyen Huu
Thien, an expert on ecology and climate change, is expected to express his
opinions at a conference on the Mekong Delta region held by the central
government in Can Tho City on September 26 and 27.
Thien warned
that the country’s ‘rice basket’ sinks by 1.1 centimeters every year.
The
situation is much worse in urban areas and industrial zones with annual
subsidence of about 2.5 centimeters.
Sea level
rises by one millimeter per year, the pundit continued, adding that the
Mekong Delta is on average only one to 1.5 meters above sea level.
If this
continues, it will only be a matter of time before the region is completely
submerged, Thien said.
Thien quoted
the findings of scientists from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, whose
study revealed that the Mekong Delta had sunk by 18 centimeters and up to 53
centimeters in some places, between 1991 and 2016.
The
phenomenon has been exacerbated by climate change, which causes sea level to
rise, while subsidence in the region has never been more serious, he
remarked.
Groundwater exploitation
The research
attributed subsidence to the excessive exploitation of local groundwater.
The Mekong
Delta has seven layers of groundwater resource, all of which are depleting.
The work of
the Dutch researchers also revealed that the region had sunk by 40
millimeters per year between 1991 and 2000, Thien continued, adding that the
annual rate increased to 60 millimeters from 2000 to 2005, 90 between 2006
and 2010, and up to 1.1 centimeters during the 2011-16 period.
Local
farmers have dug deeper wells in recent years as water at the upper layers
has become contaminated with alum and saline.
While the
Mekong Delta has many large river systems, local waterways are now unsafe for
swimming, let alone for cooking, drinking, and other daily activities, the
Vietnamese expert assessed.
Several
rivers have also become polluted by industrial wastewater, pesticides, and
animal husbandry operations, forcing people to use groundwater as their
primary source of fresh water for daily use, business operations, and
production.
Stopping groundwater exploitation is
a must
The only
solution is to minimize or stop the exploitation of groundwater and utilize
surface resources, Thien explained.
This will
require local authorities to exert more effort in preventing rivers and lakes
from becoming contaminated, he suggested.
Farmers
should switch to high-tech agriculture as in more modernized countries, which
will help reduce pollution.
People in
coastal locations should also adapt to using salt and brackish water in their
crop cultivation in order to become less reliant on fresh water.
Alternative
sources for drinking water can be obtained from storing rainwater and
applying nanotechnology and reverse osmosis (RO) to turn salt water into
fresh water.
Thien
advised against structural measures such as building dams, as they are costly
and do not guarantee good results.
Constructing
embankments to prevent salinity can also backfire because rivers and lakes
can become more polluted, he elaborated.
The Mekong
Delta is distinct in that the river system is connected with the sea through
hundreds of outfalls.
Preventing
this from happening by building dams can cause a disturbance to the river’s
eco-system and further environmental degradation, the expert claimed.
Tuoitrenews
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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 9, 2017
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