vietnamnews
| Sand mining activities at Dầu Tiếng Reservoir in Tây Ninh Province have been suspended since April 20. — Photo tuoitre.vn |
Conversations on Vietnam Development
| Sand mining activities at Dầu Tiếng Reservoir in Tây Ninh Province have been suspended since April 20. — Photo tuoitre.vn |
Vietnam Bear Sanctuary in Tam Dao National Park, Vinh Phuc, the first of its kind in the country, is opening for visitors to raise public awareness of protecting the endangered species.
Operating since April 2008, the sanctuary spans 1.2 hectares and can accommodate 200 bears. Two newly-inaugurated semi-natural outdoor enclosures linked with two double bear houses cover a total area of more than 5,600 square metres. Tiếp tục đọc “New home for rescued capitive bears in Vinh Phuc” |
Môi trườngvietnamnews Update: May, 16/2017 – 18:00
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| The removal of hydropower projects and potential sites is because most of them are located in forest areas, meaning hydropower plant construction would seriously affect forest resources and local ecology.—VNA/VNS Photo |
Viet Nam News HÀ NỘI — Authorities in the Central Highlands province of Đắk Lắk have made the decision to scrap plans for constructing 17 small and medium hydropower plants with total capacity of 27.4 megawatts.
The province has also axed 69 sites which have potential to become future stations, with combined capacity totalling 117 megawatts.
The move comes following the Prime Minister’s directive to close natural forests in the Central Highlands to deal with climate change during the 2016-2020 period, Đắk Lắk vice chairman Y Giang Gry Nie Knong said. Tiếp tục đọc “Đắk Lắk scraps plans for 17 hydropower plants”
| A family of the Red-Shanked Doucs (Pygathryx nemaeus) is snapped at the Sơn Trà Nature Reserve in Đà Nẵng city. The central city’s People’s Court decided to imprison illegal hunter Nguyễn Văn Lý three years in prison for killing the endangered langurs. — VNS Photo Bùi Văn Tuấn |
The court said Lý had violated regulations on hunting and killing endangered species under the list of protected animals of the Governmental Decree No 32. Tiếp tục đọc “Illegal hunter convicted for killing endangered langur”
It’s everywhere. From the Mariana Trench to the floor of the Arctic Ocean, on tropical beaches and polar coasts. It’s in wildlife, seafood, sea salt and even on the surface of Mars. The world is blighted by plastic. Up to 12m tonnes of the stuff enters the world’s oceans every year (that’s one new tonne of plastic every three to 10 seconds) and it doesn’t go to that magical place called “away”.
Once in the oceans, it can float around for years, or even decades, before being swallowed by a bird or a whale. During that time, it can travel tens of thousands of kilometres, all the while absorbing contaminants from the sea water, concentrating them like a sponge. When wildlife ingest plastic, the brew of toxic chemicals can be transferred to the animal’s tissues with potentially dangerous consequences. Tiếp tục đọc “Toxic timebomb: why we must fight back against the world’s plague of plastic”
Bất cập trong quản lý và khai thác nước ngầm – Bài 1
Ông Nguyễn Đăng Biển (bên phải) ở tổ 4, khu phố Phú Hưng.phường Phú Thịnh, thị xã Bình Long khoan giếng tại ấp Quản Lợi A, xã Tân Lợi (Hớn Quản)
01:33 PM – 05/05/2017
BP – Những năm gần đây, thời tiết diễn biến bất thường dẫn đến khô kiệt nguồn nước, ảnh hưởng sinh hoạt và phát triển sản xuất của người dân. Khi nước mặt cạn kiệt, các hồ chứa trơ đáy, giải pháp khoan để khai thác nước ngầm được cho là hiệu quả nhất, dẫn đến dịch vụ khoan giếng nở rộ và là nguyên nhân chính làm cạn kiệt nguồn nước cục bộ, gia tăng ô nhiễm các tầng chứa nước. Thậm chí làm ô nhiễm mạch nước ngầm do các giếng khoan không gặp nước đã không được trám lấp, về mùa mưa chất bẩn theo dòng nước chảy xuống giếng. Tiếp tục đọc “Bất cập trong quản lý và khai thác nước ngầm – 2 bài”
Updated : 05/14/2017 16:01 GMT + 7
The Cat Ba ecotourism resort and entertainment complex in the namesake archipelago, developed by Vietnamese conglomerate Sun Group, was kick-started on Saturday, with total investment estimated at US$3 billion.
The project began with the construction of a seaport and station of an over-the-sea cable car system, 21km long, connecting Cat Hai and Cat Ba Towns.
The third terminal of the cable car is expected to be located near the administrative center of the Cat Ba National Park on the main island.
Aside from the transportation system, the project will also include three golf courses, an amusement park, and several components to leverage the tourism potential of local areas such as Qua Vang Cave, Lan Ha Bay, Viet Hai Village, and Cat Ong Island.

A clam farm, previously owned by residents in Cat Ba Archipelago, has been backfilled for the construction of the massive resort. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Le Khac Nam, vice-chairman of the Hai Phong People’s Committee, told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that local authorities and Sun Group had carried out multiple surveys and pooled feedback before laying out a plan for the project.
The building of the cable car as well as other constructions will only take place in the outer areas and along the coast, Nam said, claiming that it would not affect the Cat Ba biosphere reserve, which has always been strictly protected.
The resort complex plays a very essential role in developing tourism on Cat Ba, the official elaborated.
“Upon completion, the project will surely transform Cat Ba into a world-class tourist destination,” he added.
Meanwhile, Hoang Van Thap, director of the Cat Ba National Park, affirmed that he had not been asked to give any advice on the construction.
Thap added he had not been aware that some structures would be built within the park, where many rare animal and plant species are being protected.

A map showing the ecotourism project in Cat Ba Archipelago. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Developing tourism in the area requires careful consideration by competent agencies to ensure that the wildlife habitat will not be subject to any damage, Thap asserted.
Local conservationists are concerned that the Cat Ba langur species, the most endangered species in Vietnam being protected at the national park, would face multiple threats.
As of April, only 56 langurs had been recorded on Cat Ba.
According to Tran Thanh Liem, vice-chairman of the People’s Committee in Dong Bai Commune, Cat Hai District, among the 720 hectares of land needed to implement the project, 500 hectares is located in Dong Bai.
Two out of three villages in the commune have been relocated in order for the construction to take place, Liem said.
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| Similar to using boats, a manual form of bottom trawling – which also makes use of huge nets that can cover a portion of nearshore sea – can drag in every form of sea life in that area, and a still common in the central province of Nghệ An. — VNA/VNS Photo Nguyễn Văn Nhật |
“The setup is either one trawler or two trawlers running in tandem, dragging a huge net with very fine holes, scooping up fish of all sizes. Other than the fact that all sea creatures are caught and bycatches are discarded, the ecosystem along the sea floor is irreparably damaged,” Việt said. Tiếp tục đọc “Bottom trawling a threat to the ocean, fishermen”

Monday 15 May 2017 02.00 EDT
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On a swampy patch of degraded forest land on the Indonesian island of Sumatra stands a hooded black figure, face obscured by plumes of smoke. Something strange is afoot.
Elsewhere, random limbs protrude eerily from unexpected places. A sun bear, piggybacking a startled child, traipses stoically across a foreign landscape. A miniature man settles into a hammock strung between two oil palm saplings. Tiếp tục đọc “Where there’s a wall there’s a way: artists take aim at Sumatra’s palm oil industry”
The prime minister of Laos has voiced concern over widespread chemical usage on banana plantations after a Reuters report on Chinese-run farms in the Southeast Asian country.
REUTERS: The prime minister of Laos has voiced concern over widespread chemical usage on banana plantations after a Reuters report on Chinese-run farms in the Southeast Asian country.
Reuters reported that while the banana boom had brought economic benefits to the impoverished region, there was also strong concern at the use of chemicals – including the herbicide paraquat, which is banned in Laos. Tiếp tục đọc “Laos prime minister concerned over banana plantations”
Tiếp tục đọc “Bọt trắng như tuyết bốc mùi, nổi dày đặc trên kênh Tàu Hủ sau trận mưa lớn”
Wet fuel briquettes made from human waste and sawdust are dried outside at the Nakuru Water and Sanitation Services Company plant in Nakuru, Kenya, April 8, 2017. TRF/ Be
by Benson Rioba | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 12 May 2017 13:38 GMT
Using human waste to make fuel briquettes tackles sanitation and health problems – and they even smell sweetBy Benson Rioba
NAKURU, Kenya, May 12 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Poultry farmer Josephine Mbithe used to get up three times a night to add charcoal to her stove just to keep her newborn chicks warm. But since she started using fuel briquettes made with human waste, the stove burns all night, leaving her to sleep in peace.
Mbithe is one of many Nakuru residents who have embraced the briquettes manufactured from human poo and sawdust collected around the town, northwest of Nairobi, in the Great Rift Valley. Tiếp tục đọc “Human poo transformed into clean fuel for Kenya’s urban poor”
More than 650 million people, or 10% of the world’s population, do not have access to safe water, putting them at risk of infectious diseases and premature death.
By David Sim
Updated May 12, 2017 15:12 BST
World Water Day is marked on 22 March every year to raise awareness of the water crisis facing much of the world’s population. The UN estimates that more than 663 million people do not have a safe water supply close to home. Instead of turning on a tap, they must spend countless hours queueing or trekking to sources of water. This water is often contaminated, putting people at risk of infectious diseases and premature death.

Dirty water and poor sanitation can cause severe diseases in children, killing 900 under-fives every day across the world, according to United Nations estimates – or one child every two minutes. Among newborn babies, the World Health Organisation says infections caused by a lack of safe water and an unclean environment cause one death every minute somewhere in the world. Tiếp tục đọc “World Water Day 2017: 60 powerful photos to make you think twice about leaving the tap running”
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| Ông Nguyễn Sự, nguyên Bí thư Thành ủy, Chủ tịch HĐND TP Hội An (Ảnh: HC) |
Ông cho hay, mấy tháng qua ông theo dõi rất sát các diễn biến chung quanh vụ 40 móng biệt thự ở khu du lịch sinh thái biển Tiên Sa cũng như quy hoạch khu du lịch quốc gia ở Sơn Trà. Tuy nhiên ông đã từ chối đề nghị phỏng vấn của khá nhiều báo, vì ông nghĩ mình ở Hội An, không nên can thiệp vào việc của Đà Nẵng. Nhưng đến khi đọc bài tường thuật buổi làm việc của Tổng cục Du lịch với Hiệp hội Du lịch Đà Nẵng chiều 11/5 thì ông không thể im lặng được nữa mà gọi điện cho PV Infonet bày tỏ bức xúc: Tiếp tục đọc “Ông Nguyễn Sự: Tôi nổi điên vì phát biểu của lãnh đạo Tổng cục Du lịch về Sơn Trà”
Updated : 05/13/2017 14:00 GMT + 7
The environment and lives of dozens of millions of people living in the Lower Mekong Basin are being threatened as the Mekong River is expected to see yet another hydropower dam construction, experts said at an international conference on Friday.
Experts all express concerns over the Laos-proposed Pak Beng dam, the latest to be built on the Mekong River, as they convened for a consultation process held by the Vietnam Mekong River Commission in the southern Vietnamese city of Can Tho. Tiếp tục đọc “Proposed dam to poses more threat to Vietnam’s Mekong Delta: conference”