
Dr Phung Chi Sy, vice chairman of the Vietnam Association for the Protection ofNature and Environment, said it is vital to develop an environmental protectionplan for the entire basin.
“The plan must clearly identify the pollution sources and degradation sourcesand make forecasts for until 2030.”
It is vital to assess the pollutant levels in each river, and strictly regulatewaste discharge into it from industrial and residential areas.
“Any act of environmental pollution must be severely penalised.”
Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Vo Tuan Nhan added, “Weneed to draft a law on national environmental protection and bio-diversityconservation as part of the effort.”
Experts have urged HCM City and provinces in the basin to collect and treatwastewater before releasing it into the river.
They must also develop measures to control illegal sand mining anddeforestation and protect the river’s eco-system, they said.
The localities have in recent years undertaken a number of measures to protectthe basin, including installing a system to monitor the water environment.
In Binh Phuoc province, to protect the Be River’s environment, the Bu Dop ForestProtection Bureau plans to restore the flora and fauna of an area of 500hawhile protecting existing forests.
Birds and animals are expected to improve bio-diversity, enabling the provinceto develop eco-tourism.
Dong Nai province has worked with neighbouring provinces and cities and centralagencies to implement many drastic measures.
It has 31 industrial zones (IZs) and dozens of industrial clusters withthousands of businesses there discharging more than 127,000cu.m of wastewaterinto the river daily.
Earlier this year the Government approved a plan to move the Bien Hoa IndustrialPark 1 from the river basin.
In HCM City, all 21 seriously polluting establishments have improved pollutiontreatment while others have been relocated or shut, according to cityauthorities.
The city has also completed the zoning of water based on water qualityindicators (WQI) to assess the use of water from rivers and canals.
It has collected data on pollution caused by industrial effluents in thedistricts of Binh Thanh, Go Vap, Cu Chi, Hoc Mon, Nha Be, 4, 7, 9, 12 to assessthe impact of industrial activities in the basin.
It has conducted a survey to identify those guilty of discharging wastewaterdirectly into canals and ditches and calculate their level of pollution.
It has also created GIS maps to monitor and manage those guilty of dischargingeffluents.
To ensure they can supply clean water to the city, authorities recently decidedto gradually draw from further upstream in the Sai Gon and Dong Nai rivers.
Worsening pollution
Experts said pollution in the Dong Nai River basin, which supplies water toaround 17 million people in HCM City and nearby provinces, would continue toaffect water supply since it is polluted by untreated wastewater from millionsof households and thousands of factories.
Hydropower generation, irrigation and other activities also contribute to thepollution.
Le Viet Hung, director of the Dong Nai provincial Department of NaturalResources and Environment, said that in the basin pollutants, including organicsubstances, iron and bacteria in the water exceed permissible levels.
The Dong Nai River in particular, but also many other rivers in the country,has been over-exploited for hydropower.
Water in the downstream areas of the Sai Gon River suffers from severemicro-biological pollution and slight oil contamination.
Pollution indicators like ammonia, micro-organisms and manganese have allincreased above levels permitted by Vietnam and the World Health Organisation.
The Dong Nai basin, one of the country’s largest, is drained by four mainrivers, Dong Nai, Sai Gon, Thi Vai, and Vam Co.
Besides HCM City and Dong Nai province, the basin also comprises Dak Nong, DakLak, Lam Dong, Ninh Thuan, Binh Thuan, Binh Phuoc, Binh Duong, Ba Ria-Vung Tau,Long An, and Tay Ninh provinces./.
VNA