link ae888

Cham island urges tourists to take their waste home

Management of the Cham Island Marine Protected Area (MPA) has called local fishermen and tourists to take rubbish back to the mainland for treatment rather than dumping it at landfill on the island.
The Cham Islands are one of the most favourite eco-tour destinations in central Vietnam (Photo: VNA)
The Cham Islands are one of the most favourite eco-tour destinations in central Vietnam (Photo: VNA)

Quang Nam (VNS/VNA)🌳 - The management of the Cham Island Marine Protected Area (MPA) has called on local fishermen and tourists to take their rubbish back to the mainland for treatment rather than dumping it at landfill on the island.

The MPA said the island, 20km off the coast of Hoi An ancient town, the central province of Quang Nam, are being overloaded, struggling to cope with up to five tonnes of daily waste with only half of that amount being burnt, with the remainder going to the Eo Gio landfill. Huynh Thi Thuy Huong, a member of the Cham Island Marine Protected Area (MPA) managing board, said the plan has been included in the Hoi An city’s action plan in 2025. It means that tourists should be aware of keeping the eco-tourism island ‘clean’, and only environment-friendly manners will be encouraged. It said the ‘waste clear’ programme is one of many activities in the ‘zerowaste and non-plastic use’ action plan across one o of the most popular visitor destinations in central Vietnam, aiming to make the island ‘green’ and ‘clean’.
The MPA and local community has been building a series of programmes including ‘non-plastic bag’ use, saying No to single use plastics and aiming to recycle and re-use environment-friendly packages as much as possible. Two Material Recovery Facility (MRF) stations were built to collect and recycle daily waste, aiming to cut in half the amount of waste sent to landfill. In a three-day waste survey last year, MPA reported that 80% of waste collected at beaches was plastic including bottle, foam and ‘ghost’ fishing net (drift net), while 76% was left-over food, cans, bottles and packages dump at sea by fishermen. Dustbins are not not available on many fishing boats and only 16% fishermen voluntarily collected waste at sea.
The island, which include eight islets with 2,400 inhabitants, are the first and the only location in Vietnam promoting successfully the non-use of plastic bags and the ‘3Rs’ (reduce, reuse and recycle) since it was recognised as the world biosphere reserve site by UNESCO in 2009. The island community and the MPA management board, in cooperation with the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), WWF-Vietnam, IUCN and the UNESCO, have been boosting the marine environment protection by promoting a ban on single-use plastic. Non-use plastic bag notices can be seen at the Cua Dai port – the major launch point for all boat trips from the mainland to the island – warning visitors to remove any plastic bags from their luggage. The island set a limit on overall numbers of visitors at 2,500 visitors per day back in 2015. The islanders themselves earned 3.6 million USD last year, 65% of which is from tourism and associated services, and more than 80% of the population have switched from fishing to the eco-tourism sector.
The island is home to 1,500ha of tropical forests and 6,700ha of marine space, featuring a wide range of marine fauna and flora, including many endangered species such as salangane (swallows), the long-tailed monkey and the crab-eating macaque (Macaca fascicularis)./.
VNA

See more

The Phu Ho agricultural cooperative in Phu Ho commune, Phu Vang district, Hue city mobilises manpower and pumps to drain floodwater and save rice crops for local farmers. (Photo: VNA)

ꦓ PM orders strengthened disaster preparedness ahead of storm season

Under the directive, the PM instructed relevant agencies to regularly inspect, supervise and proactively implement disaster prevention, response and rescue measures in line with their assigned roles and mandates, ensuring readiness, avoiding passivity or delays, and maintaining operational continuity amid ongoing political and administrative restructuring at levels.
The research team collects seawater samples in Ha Long Bay and Cua Luc. (Photo: VNA)

💫 Vietnam pioneers use of AI and remote sensing to monitor seawater quality

According to Dr. Vu Anh Tuan, Deputy Director General of the Vietnam Space Centre and head of the project, this is the first study in Vietnam to simultaneously employ Sentinel-2 satellite data, advanced machine learning algorithms, and the Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud computing platform to model and monitor key seawater quality parameters.
Roads are underwater in Quang Tri province (Photo: VNA)

ꦕ Wutip storm ravages central Vietnam, leaving trail of destruction

Wutip, the first storm in the East Sea so far this year, has wreaked havoc across central Vietnam, claiming lives, displacing residents, and causing widespread damage to houses, crops, and infrastructure, the Department of Dyke Management and Disaster Prevention and Control reported as of 6:30 pm on June 13.
Deputy Minister Nguyen Hoang Hiep, attends the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction (GP2025) in Geneva, Switzerland, June 4. (Photo: VNA)

♋ Vietnam engages in Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction

Addressing a session on “Accelerating Financing for Resilience: Tailored Solutions for Disaster Risk Reduction,” Deputy Minister Hiep emphasised Vietnam's proposal in building sustainable financing in response to natural disasters, which aligns with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction's goals.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Environment, in collaboration with the People’s Committee of the northern province of Quang Ninh, hold a meeting to mark the World Environment Day on June 1 (Photo: VNA)

🐲 Vietnam ramps up plastic waste recycling, reuse, treatment efforts

In 2019, Quang Ninh became one of the first localities in Vietnam to launch a province-wide campaign against plastic waste, mobilising the participation of the political system, the business sector, and the general public. Other localities—such as Hai Phong, Da Nang, Binh Duong, and Ho Chi Minh City—have also effectively implemented waste-sorting initiatives at source, along with models for plastic-free markets and urban areas.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link link link ae888}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|