‘A slow, silent disaster’ – Worst drought in a century dries up Vietnam's waterways
By Staff Writers
Hanoi, Vietnam (UPI) Mar 8, 2009 Vietnam is struggling with its worst drought in more than 100 years. With practically no rainfall since September, the country is facing timber fires, plagues of rice-eating insects that are destroying millions of acres of rice paddies and dried-up rivers, Time magazine reports. For a country that historically has had to cope with flash floods and landslides during the July-to-November monsoon season, the drought is taking a lingering toll on the Vietnamese. “Drought is a slow, silent disaster, which in the long run will have a more profound impact on peoples’ livelihoods,” Ian Wilderspin, senior technical adviser for disaster risk management at the U.N. Development Program in Hanoi told Time. Rain is not expected any time soon. The Vietnam Institute of Hydro Meteorology and Environment said Thursday that the country’s ongoing drought, an aftermath of El Nino, a cyclical warming pattern, is forecast to last until May, China’s state news agency Xinhua reports. The Red River, North Vietnam’s largest river, is normally a bustling waterway. Typically the volume of water in the river increases by more than 60 times at the peak of the rainy season. Now the Red River is 2.2 feet deep, its lowest point since 1902 when levels were first recorded. And water levels in the Mekong Delta in south Vietnam — called the nation’s rice bowl — have fallen to their lowest points in nearly 20 years, threatening the livelihoods of tens of millions of people who depend on the river basin for farming, fishing and transportation, Time reports. The delta faces an even greater threat: salt. Normally, salt water from the South China Sea makes its way about 18 miles inland. But this year, salt contamination is hitting areas 40 miles up the river. …
Drought dries up Vietnam’s waterways