The Ho Chi Minh City Department of Natural Resources and Environment plans to change the way solid waste is classified at source to suit treatment technologies, its chief has said.
Workers sort waste at a waste treatment factory (Photo: VNA)
HCMCity (VNA) -😼 The Ho Chi Minh City Department of Natural Resources and Environment plans to change the waysolid waste is classified at source to suit treatment technologies, its chiefhas said.
Speaking at a meeting held bythe department on January 3 toreview its performance last year and make plans for this year, director Nguyen Toan Thang said the city’s focus with regard tourban solid waste management is onrecycling and burning technologies. Thus, instead of threecategories, organic, recyclable and other wastes, rubbish just needed to beclassified into two, recyclable and others, he said. The department has submittedthe proposal to the People’s Committee for approval and expects to introducethe change in the first quarter of this year. The city has closed fivelandfill sites to reduce burial of solid wastes. It has also made urbandevelopment plans at two of them, Go Cat in Binh Tan districtand Dong Thanh in Hoc Mon district. Around 15 developers have expressed interest in building parks orhousing at the two sites, Thang said. The city is also taking stepsto reduce the volume of buried waste and adopt advanced waste-treatmenttechnologies. Late last year, construction work began on two waste-to-energy plants in Cu Chi district with a daily processing capacity of2,000 tonnes, and an industrial and hazardous waste-treatment plant in Binh Chanh district with a capacity of 500 tonnes. Work on another solidwaste-treatment plant will start this month. The Da Phuoclandfill site in Binh Chanh district, which receives more than 5,000tonnes of rubbish a day now,will become full and is expected to be closed by 2024. Last year a total of nearly2.88 million tonnes of solid waste were treated. The city generates 9,500tonnes of waste daily, including 23 tonnes of medical waste and 350-400 tonnesof hazardous waste. The city collectedenvironmental protection fees from 3,505 production establishments last year.The fees exceed 12.5 billion VND (540,000 USD) per quarter. There were more than 1,860private garbage collectors, who were either members of environmental cooperativegroups or had their own business. The department organised anumber of activities to spread the message to the public that trash should notbe discarded indiscriminately.
It also installed more than33,600 dustbins in public places.
All supermarkets, shopping malls, convenience stories and bookstores in Ho Chi Minh City are encouraged to swap plastic bags for environmentally friendly options; while 50 percent of merchants at traditional markets are expected to do the same by 2020.
The city also wants all solid waste sorted at source by the same year, with 50% of local households and other sources of waste sorting their garbage in line with regulations and standards.
In 2017, up to 38,000 tonnes of municipal waste was generated a day in Vietnam and a lack of proper solutions to the waste problem is harming the urban environment.
A group of specialists, including Le Hoang Anh, Mac Thi Minh Tra and Nguyen Thi Bich Loan, from the Northern Centre for Environmental Monitoring Portal under the Vietnam Environment Administration discovered municipal solid waste in the country increases 10 to 16 percent each year.
Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang and Hai Phong account for 45.24 percent of solid waste generated by urban areas.
Up to 70 percent of municipal solid waste is household waste.
Plastic waste makes up 7 percent of solid waste, about 2,400 tonnes a day.
𒁃 Up to 95 percent of plastic waste in Hanoi, however, is buried. The percentage in Ho Chi Minh City is 76 percent./.
Allen Warren, Vice Mayor of Sacramento in the US’s California, spoke of Vietnam Waste Solutions Inc. (VWS)’s waste treatment technology while visiting a waste treatment complex in HCM City on Nov. 10.
Ho Chi Minh City is prioritising foreign investment into projects on urban infrastructure and environment treatment, said Permanent Vice Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee Le Thanh Liem on December 13.
Floodwater levels in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta are high and will continue to rise this month, especially in upstream areas, according to the hydraulic works management and construction department of the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment.
Conservation efforts to restore habitat and boost the population of red-crowned cranes in Tram Chim National Park are finally showing progress, with the cranes and many other rare wild birds coming back to the park.
Torrential rains from the night of July 31 to early August 1 triggered flash floods and landslides across several communes in Dien Bien province, leaving at least two people dead and eight others missing.
Transitioning to a circular economy not only offers a sustainable development path for Ho Chi Minh City but also serves as a pivotal step toward establishing a fully green economy.
An exhibition featuring 100 green, recycled, and circular economy models and products from 50 businesses and educational establishments took place in Ho Chi Minh City on July 31, as part of the local green transition forum and recycle day 2025.
Regional solidarity and cooperation are the key factor for the effective implementation of wildlife protection regulations. Only through sustainable cooperation, innovative approaches, and collective action can biodiversity be safeguarded for the present and future generations, an Vietnamese official has said.
Hanoi has approved a comprehensive plan to restore the environmental quality and develop four major urban rivers – the To Lich, Kim Nguu, Lu, and Set reverine environments.
The Javan pangolin is listed in Vietnam’s Red Book as critically endangered and is protected under Group IB – a category reserved for forest species facing an extremely high risk of extinction and requiring strict conservation measures.
As a key member of the core group of 18 countries, initiated by Vanuatu, Vietnam engaged in advocating for the UN General Assembly’s Resolution N.77/276, requesting for the ICJ’s advisory opinion. Following the resolution's adoption, Vietnam fully participated in all procedural steps for the first time, from submitting written proposals to presenting directly at the court’s hearings.
The wild elephant population in Da Nang includes a full developed herb of mature males, females, and calves. To date, the herd has grown to nine individuals.
Conservation efforts here have become a model, helping to save millions of turtle hatchlings and promoting Con Dao as a member of the Indian Ocean-Southeast Asia Turtle Site Network.
As part of its drive to fulfil its net zero emissions commitment by 2050, Vietnam is fast-tracking the development of a legal corridor to launch a pilot carbon market by the end of 2025, according to the Department of Climate Change.
Under the plan, from 2025 to 2026, the city will complete mechanisms and policies to support businesses in switching to green vehicles, expand the electric and green-energy bus network, and build charging stations. The targeted proportion of green buses is set at 10% in 2025 and 20–23% in 2026.
Storm Comay, the fourth in the East Sea this year, was at around 16.7 degrees North and 118.3 degrees East, in the east of the East Sea's northern waters as of 4am on July 24.
The disaster risk warning level for flash floods, landslides, and ground subsidence due to heavy rains and flows is rated at level 1, except in Nghe An, where it is raised to level 2.