HCM City needs long-term master plan to ensure water supply: experts

(Photo: VNA)
HCM City (VNS/VNA) – Ho Chi Minh City needs a master plan for 30 years to make sure that investments in water supply dovetail with the overall long-term plan, experts have said.
The master plan should give directions and
guidance and be implemented with flexibility, said Sytze Jarigsma, former
resident project manager of the Utility Support Programme funded by the Dutch
embassy.
The plans allows application of new
technology if available and welcomes improvements based on newer insights, he
told a conference last week on international and domestic experience
in research and application for water supply recommendations for HCM City for
the 2019-2035 period.
Raw water development needs urgent
consideration, he said.
Currently, there are three water sources
for the city, the Dong Nai and Sai Gon rivers and groundwater, he said.
The Dong Nai river is a good source for probably
another 10 years or so, but after that climate change is expected to affect
salinity too much, he said.
The Sai Gon river is already a good source that has been affected by high salinity
and pollution, he said.
Groundwater abstractions would be phased
out soon to limit ground subsidence, he predicted.
Raw water intakes at existing upstream Dau Tieng and Tri An lakes would be
options for the city, he said.
It would be an achievement if non-revenue
water or water losses could be brought down to 20 percent, and not much more
could be expected, he said.
In the long term, new pipes would be
installed and bad ones would be removed, resulting in reduction in water
losses, he said.
Paul Smith of the Australian Water Association (AWA)
said the greatest risks to consumers of drinking water are pathogenic
micro-organisms.
Protection of water sources and treatment
are of paramount importance and cheaper than treatment, he said.
A drinking water system must have and
continuously maintain robust multiple barriers commensurate with the level of
potential contamination, he said.
Vo Van Hoan, Vice Chairman of the HCM City People’s Committee, said rapid urbanisation has put pressure on the city’s
water infrastructure, which is ageing.
It is a great challenge for the city to
maintain water supply and keep pace with the economic growth, he said.
It has made huge efforts to accomplish the
target of supplying clean water to 100 percent of households, he said.
But the city is in the downstream area of
the Dong Nai river and Sai Gon river, and is affected by what happens
upstream, he said.
Climate change and pollution have worsened
water supply, he said. “The city is urgently developing a project
for drinking water supply.”
It brought down water losses to 23.3 percent
from 26 percent in 2017 and 30.9 percent in 2015. Its daily water supply total capacity is 2.4 million cubic metres.
According to the Department of
Construction, the city will upgrade 1,430km of old pipelines and install more
new pipelines by 2025./.