Nearly 90 percent of city sewage ends up in rivers

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - Nearly 90 percent of Vietnam's urban sewage is discharged untreated directly into its rivers and streams, according to a report by the Ministry of Construction.
The report also revealed alarming figures for the Vietnam’s two biggest cities – Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City – regarding the handling of household sewage from millions of residents.
The capital city currently has six wastewater treatment plants. They include the Kim Lien plant with a capacity of 3,700cu.m per day, Truc Bach with 2,300cu.m, Bay Mau with 13,300cu.m, Bac Thang Long-Van Tri with 42,000cu.m and the largest one, Yen So, is able to process about 200,000cu.m of wastewater a day.
The plants, however, only managed to filter 22 percent of the total sewage discharged every day in the city, while the remaining 78 percent went straight from houses and restaurants to the environment.
The Hanoi People’s Committee said in its own report that the
construction of new wastewater treatment plants was seriously behind schedule.
It also admitted difficulties in realising the Master
Planning on Drainage in Hanoi by 2030. According to the master planning, which
was signed in 2013, up to 90 percent of the city’s population would have their
sewage collected and treated by 2030 and the rate was due to reach 100 percent
by 2050.
Capital shortage was the main concern of the city
authorities. Several priority projects were still on paper, said the Hanoi
People’s Committee, as building a sewage system required a tremendous sum of
money from the city’s already strained budget. Meanwhile, there were certain
obstacles to call for funding from the private sector.
In the south, HCM City had around 21 percent of urban sewage
water treated – a similar percentage to Hanoi’s.
There were three wastewater plants currently running in the
city with total capacity reaching 302,000 cubic metres – equal to just a fifth
of the sewage discharged across the city every day, which was estimated at 1.57
million cubic metres.
They were Binh Hung plant capable of handling 141,000cu.m, Binh
Hung Hoa with 30,000 cu.m and Tham Luong-Ben Cat with 131,000cu.m.
The city was supposed to build seven sewage treatment plants
according to a city drainage plan between 2016 and 2020.
When those new plants are completed and start operating, up
to 1.4 million cu.m will be filtered daily, accounting for over 90 percent of the
total city’s discharged wastewater.
That scenario, however, was not likely to happen soon as all
seven plant projects were still calling for investors.
Director of the Construction Ministry’s Department of Science
& Technology and Environment Vu Ngoc Anh said that there were 43 urban
wastewater treatment plants nationwide with a total capacity of over
926,000cu.m per day.
“The issue lies in how to thoroughly connect the sewer system
to collect and handle sewage. This is why the (national) treatment rate is so
low, at around 13 percent,” he told the Thanh Nien newspaper.
Another report on Vietnam’s urban sewage management by the
World Bank agreed with such a low number, saying that only 10 percent of the
country’s total sewage actually went through a treatment plant.
The country was thirsty for investment – estimated at about 8.3 billion USD– to build drainage infrastructure for 36 million people living
in cities, according to the World Bank’s report.
Head of the Institute of Environmental Science and
Engineering, Dr Nguyen Viet Anh, admitted that the biggest challenge to
Vietnam’s urban drainage was how to connect the household sewers to the
citywide network.
“Most of the drainage projects funded by ODA (official
development assistance) did not cover that (sewer linkages). And after the
project was completed, it was very hard for the authorities or the communities
to do the connection work,” Anh said./.