Environment
Stubble burning lowers visibility
Biz Directory
| 1. Cowaelmic JSC. Category: Civil Engineering City: Ha Noi Image: |
| 2. Ngoc Hung Group Category: Farming City: Daklak Province Image: |
| 3. Van Phat Hung Co., LTD. Category: Commercial Property City: Ho Chi Minh Image: |
| 4. Hoang Phat Vissai Group Category: Building Materials City: Ninh Binh Province Image: |
| 5. QNCC JSC. Category: Building Materials City: Ha Long, Quang Ninh Image: |
| 6. Toan Thang Steel Co.,... Category: Building Materials City: Ho Chi Minh Image: |
The burning of stubble has left a pall of black smoke over western parts of Ha Noi, particularly in the districts of Quoc Oai and Thach That, raising health concerns and disrupting visibility on roads.
Vu Van Hau, director of the city's Natural Resources and Environment Department, said farmers in Quoc Oai and Thach That districts had been burning stubble for the last few days after harvesting their rice crops. South-easterly winds had made matters worse, Hau said.
Nguyen Thi Binh, a resident of Tu Liem District, said she had been forced to keep all doors and windows shut to prevent smoke from entering her house. She and her children had also been forced to wear face masks and sunglasses to protect their eyes and lungs.
Binh said she was particularly concerned about one of her children who is asthmatic.
Dr Dao Bich Van, from the National Hospital of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases, said inhaling smoke would aggravate respiratory diseases and lead to increased incidents of flu and rhinitis.
She said people should turn on fans and air-conditioners to circulate the air in their homes.
Meanwhile, poor visibility is being blamed for a number of accidents on highways 32, 21B and the Lang - Hoa Lac road.
Le Chung, from Dong Da District, said her car was nearly hit by a truck on Highway 32 last Saturday because of the smoke from stubble burning.
Director Hau said his department at this time of year always asked district-level authorities to monitor the situation but to little avail.
Nguyen Van Sinh, chairman of Thach That District's Binh Yen Agricultural Co-operative, said rural households no longer burnt straw for cooking but used gas or electricity instead. However, he said they had to burn straw to produce fertiliser for their agricultural land.
The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment said it was looking into ways of minimising the harmful environmental effects of burning stubble.
Source: VNS
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
» Bottled green tea market: big sharks would swallow small fishes?
» Shopping frauds rampant on internet
» Titanium exploitation destroys human ecology
Latest Category Posts
- Vietnam’s poverty rate remains over 9.6 percent
- Two-story houses in ancient village of Duong Lam
- Anti-flooding projects effective in HCMC
- Quoc Oai to become an economic region in the Western Capital
- HCM City unveils detailed downtown planning
- Quang Tri eco-friendly village benefits locals
- City plans urban makeover
- HCMC approves socio-economic master plan
- Thu Thiem New Urban Area fails to lure investors
- Ho Chi Minh City downtown area to be expande
Popular Category Posts
- Exotic gardens amid the capital city
- Hanoi has nearly 6,000 unsalable apartments
- Hundreds of abandoned villas in Hanoi
- Wooden houses in Hanoi to be cleared following fire
- Plans to build trade centre near Ha Noi's Hoan Kiem Lake
- Ha Noi to remove unsightly parking lots
- Bizarre poles on Hanoi streets
- Capital to focus on areas of chronic flooding
- Tiny homes in HCM City
- City plans expansion to coast
- Master plan improves City public transport
- Urban planning in disarray
- The different looks of the Saigon riverbanks
- Vietnam strives to eradicate poverty
- Da Nang builds an environmentally-friendly city
- Shortage of playgrounds in Hanoi
- Ha Noi keeps tightening Illegal advertising
- Development of Thu Thiem New Urban Area kicks off
- Opening traffic bottlenecks in capital city
- Captail plans VND 13 trillion for clean water, rural environment


















