Conference examines wider impact of climate change
Monday, 02 November 2009
Climate change impacts, including extreme
weather, increased frequency and intensity of natural disasters such as typhoon
and floods, will threaten people’s lives and lead to serious disorders like
pollution of water sources, according to Deputy Minister of Agriculture and
Rural Development, Dao Xuan Hoc.
He was addressing the International Conference on
Realising Rights to Human Health and Development in Ha Noi organised by the
Party Central Committee’s Commission for Popularisation and Education Affairs and
Australia’s New South WalesUniversity on Wednesday.
It would also affect people’s health as rising
temperatures facilitate the growth and development of various viruses and
disease carriers, resulting in the higher incidence of infectious diseases such
as malaria, dengue, diarrhoea and malnutrition.
According to the World Health Organisation and the
UN, there are around 5 million people suffering from these diseases every year
the world over, and 150,000 die.
In Viet Nam,
the flooding caused by rains and tides in HCMCity,
Can Tho and Ha Noi were getting more severe with every passing day, Hoc said.
"It is expected that 8.4 million people will
not have access to clean water in 2050," he added.
After Typhoon Ketsana wreaked havoc in central Viet Nam last
month, the area was suffering from outbreaks of dengue, pneumonia and pink eye,
Minister of Health Nguyen Quoc Trieu said.
According to the Eye Department of the QuangNgaiProvince’s GeneralHospital, the incidence
of conjunctivitis (pink eye) has risen sharply. It is receiving 150-160
patients these days, well above the previous number of 50-60. Half of the new
patients are having the pink eye infection.
This year, more than 72,000 people have been
hospitalised because of dengue fever, an increase of 7.1 per cent in comparison
with last year. Provinces and cities with huge number of dengue patients are Ha
Noi, Da Nang, Binh Dinh, Phu Yen, Kien Giang,
Tra Vinh and HCMCity.
Besides, climate change would cause the country to
loose 2 million hectares of arable land if timely measures are not taken,
according to Hoc.
A sea level rise of up to one metre would
overwhelm the low-lying Cuu Long (Mekong)
Delta that could be almost completely inundated during the annual flooding
seasons.
The delta would also be the worst affected region
during the dry season with 70 per cent of its land suffering from salination.
Around 53,000ha of land in coastal zones in the
central region would also be submerged, which would mean the loss of 2 million
hectares of crop land, Ngoc said.
According to the Asian Development Bank (ADB),
both agriculture and natural ecosystems would suffer from increased minimum
temperatures, impacting growing periods, crop calendars and crop distribution;
and increasing pest and virus activities.
ADB experts told the conference that if the
average temperature increased by one degree Centigrade, rice yield would
decrease by 10 per cent. Inundation, the resulting loss of land and saline
water intrusion in the Cuu Long (Mekong)
Delta, one of the country’s most important agriculture areas, would pose
serious threats to farmers, as well as rice exports.
"Since Viet Nam is the second largest
exporter of rice in the world, this would impact national and international
food security," Ngoc said.
Minister Trieu said the Government was
implementing effective solutions to prevent the spread of diseases. These
include improving the quality of health examination and treatment, increasing
public awareness, and ensuring early forecast of diseases that threaten community
health.
The four-day conference, which aimed to seek ways
to confront escalating health and humanitarian problems threatening the world’s
most vulnerable people, also touched upon other substantive topics, including
HIV/AIDS and other public health threats, maternal and child health and
economic globalisation.
By addressing such barriers to the right to health
and development, the conference is expected to increase the capacity to
confront the challenges, according Hoang Van Nghia from the Vietnamese Institute
for Human Rights.
The report by the conference suggested that
governments fully address these barriers, attracting the participation of the
community in seeking solutions and fostering inter-sector dialogue to improve
the quality of healthcare tasks.
Ensuring the strict implementation of policies in
tackling health, development and human rights is also encouraged, as well as
improving the capacity of the governments in launching these policies.