link ae888

Hanoi’s leader urges completion of wastewater project

Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Nguyen Duc Chung has said he will no longer tolerate any delays to the construction of a wastewater treatment plant that is expected to address long-standing water pollution in the increasingly crowded city.
Hanoi’s leader urges completion of wastewater project ảnh 1Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Nguyen Duc Chung talks with the Project Management Board and contractor of Yen Xa wastewater treatment plant. (Photo: Kinhtedothi.vn)
Hanoi (VNA) - Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Nguyen Duc Chung has said he will no longer tolerate any delays to the construction of a wastewater treatment plant that is expected to address long-standing water pollution in the increasingly crowded city.

Chung made the comment on February 4 as he inspected the progress of the Yen Xa wastewater treatment plant in the suburban district of Thanh Tri, which is being built with financial support from Japan.

The city’s largest wastewater project, capable of handling 270,000 cu.m of wastewater a day, started in 2016 and was originally slated for completion in 2021. Municipal authorities wanted to push the completion date forward to 2019, but delays in contractor selections have led to missed deadlines.

For years, people in Hanoi have had to put up with the pollution caused by untreated wastewater discharged into the To Lich river, Chung said, referring to the notoriously foul river which has been dubbed the “black river” or “dead river” that authorities have previously tried to restore to its original state but to little effect.

The Yen Xa plant, their latest and most comprehensive effort, has a system that will collect and treat all the wastewater from households and factories along the To Lich river that would otherwise be dumped directly into the waterway.

Once operational, the river will be reborn, which is something many residents have wanted for a long time, Chung said.

Furthermore, the project will serve wastewater treatment for seven districts in the city – including the inner urban districts of Ba Dinh, Cau Giay, Thanh Xuan and Dong Da, and the suburban districts of Hoang Mai, Ha Dong and Thanh Tri.

Chung said that the project could be completed by 2021 if construction plans changed and asked the contractor deploy more machinery and workers to speed up the project, especially the construction of the wastewater collection system.

“The earlier the project is completed, the sooner the city will benefit,” he said.

Stressing the ecological importance of the project, Chung said municipal transport and construction departments needed to plan upgrades to sidewalks and transform the landscape along the To Lich river in order to attract pedestrians to the site and “make better use” of the investment in the Yen Xa plant.

According to Nguyen Van Hung, director of Hanoi’s Drainage and Sewage Project Management Board, the Yen Xa project will serve an area of 4,874ha with a population of 900,000 people.

The total length of the pipelines reach 52.6km. The project has cost 16.3 trillion VND (700 million USD), with ODA loans from the Japan International Cooperation Agency covering 84 percent of the total./.
VNA

See more

Vietnam's former Honorary Consul to Belgium Joseph-Michel de Grand Ry (Photo: VNA)

🤪 Belgium vows support for Vietnam in overcoming AO consequences

Describing Agent Orange as one of the most severe and enduring legacies of the war in Vietnam, Vietnam's former Honorary Consul to Belgium Joseph-Michel de Grand Ry warned that its impact – still affecting generations more than five decades later – could last another two to three decades.
Representatives from the Central Committee of the Vietnam Youth Federation and TikTok Vietnam at the signing ceremony of cooperation agreement for the 2025-2029 period. (Photo: hanoimoi.vn)

“I Love My Country” media campaign launched

Running from August 4 to September 2, under the hashtag #TuHaoVietNam, the campaign invites participants in two categories: “I Love My Country” video clips and “I Love My Country” check-in photos.

With a tight 13-month deadline, the move is under a strategic and urgent policy to bridge educational gaps, train the local workforce, and shore up territorial sovereignty in some of the country’s most remote areas.
Vietnamese Ambassador to China Pham Thanh Binh speaks at the exchange programme. (Photo: VNA)

🐈 Chinese children explore Vietnam at Beijing exchange

Whether they grow up to become journalists, diplomats, or professionals in other fields, these children can one day become bridges of friendship and cooperation, telling new and inspiring stories of Vietnam – China relations, said Ambassador Pham Thanh Binh.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link ae888 city 165}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|