Hanoi’s water drainage system overloaded
Heavy rains put pressure on $550 million drainage system in Hanoi

 

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The Binh Bo irrigation station in Binh Phu Commune in Phu Ninh District, Phu Tho Province. — Photo laodong.vn

The reason for this? The floods have dried up, and in other words, climate change has screwed everything up.

Binh Phu Commune in Phu Ninh District used to be regularly submerged. In 1986, the dyke system along the Lo River broke, submerging crops and blocking traffic. The old sewer system was overloaded by heavy downpours.

That’s when provincial authorities decided to build a new drainage system in the commune.

However, since it was completed in late 2016, there has been a severe shortage of rainfall.

Worse, the province is facing a shortage of water for cultivation.

The system, as a result, has been left abandoned with domestic garbage dumped and wild grass growing around it.

Hoang Tuong from Binh Phu Commune told Lao Động (Labour) newspaper what he and other residents needed was a pump from the river to the rice fields instead a drainage system.

Tuong said he had only seen the system running once or twice.

Nguyen Hung Son, director of the Phu Tho Irrigation Works One Member Co, Ltd, said they were seeing if the system could be converted.

Its original function was to pump water from the fields into the river, not vice versa, he added.

It's no surprise the system has become a dump for local residents. — VNS