Communication promoted on climate
change adaptation in Mekong Delta
Can Tho - A communication strategy on the Mekong
Delta Plan was launched at a workshop in Can Tho city on November 15.
Drought dries up a rice field in the Mekong Delta due to impacts of climate change. (Photo: VNA)
The event
was jointly organised by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment,
the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in Vietnam, and the
Can Tho University.
It was part of activities in the
framework of the agreement on strategic partnership on climate change
adaption and water management between the Governments of Vietnam and the
Netherlands, funded by the Netherlands Enterprises Agency.
The workshop introduced a
comprehensive publicity campaign on the Mekong Delta Plan in all 13 regional
city and provinces, including lecturer training programmes and training
courses targeting delegates from the 13 localities.
Pham Phu Binh, Director of the
ministry’s Department of International Cooperation, highlighted the important
role of the Mekong Delta in the nation’s economic development. However, he
said the impacts of climate change, unplanned development and overuse of
natural resources have put the region’s future at risk.
The Government and international community have developed strategies and programmes to adapt to and minimise climate change impacts, including the Mekong Delta Plan, Binh said.
Addressing the event, Dutch
Consul-General to HCM City Carel Richter said the plan maps out disciplines
on sustainable development for the Government of Vietnam to follow, taking
into account the two factors of economic development and environment
protection.
The plan has received support from
the Vietnamese Government, sponsors, and partners, he added.
According to the Can Tho University,
the Mekong Delta contributes 18 percent of the nation’s GDP, mostly in
agriculture and fisheries. However, the region’s future is being threatened
by climate change and economic development. The Mekong Delta is said to be
one of the world’s five deltas hardest hit by climate change.
The plan is expected to help the
Mekong Delta adapt to climate change challenges and turn them into
opportunities to develop sustainably, thus ensuring locals’ stable and
well-off lives as well as preserving the region’s traditional cultural value,
said Deputy Rector of the university Tran Trung Tinh.
VNA
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Thứ Sáu, 17 tháng 11, 2017
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