Netherlands helps Vietnam deal with climate change
Tuesday, 30 March 2010
Vietnam needs to learn from the Netherlands’
experience so it can help the Mekong Delta region cope more effectively with
climate change, to ensure sustainable development and food security.
This
was stated by the Minister of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE), Pham
Khoi Nguyen, at a seminar on plans to deal with climate change, jointly held by
the MONRE and the Dutch Embassy in Vietnam.
The
seminar, which was also attended by several Dutch experts, is part of a
memorandum of understanding signed by the MONRE, the Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Development and the Dutch Ministry of Transport, Public Works, &
Water Management in October 2009.
The
event is a good opportunity for Vietnamese managers and scientists to exchange
information on the impact of climate change in the Mekong Delta region.
Delegates
discussed the formulation of a short-term and long-term plan of action to deal
with climate change, which will be then submitted to authorized Vietnamese
agencies for consideration. Under the plan, specific programmes will be
developed to seek domestic and foreign assistance.
An
estimated 19-38 percent of the Mekong Delta region, which produces 50 percent
of Vietnam’s rice output, will be flooded if the sea levels rise one metre in
the next 50 years, and will cost 10 percent of the country’s GDP.