A pumpkin field affected by drought and saltwater intrusion in Long An province (Photo: VNA)
Nearly 736,000cu.m of water will be needed by 2030, according to the province’s planning on water supply.
Currently, its plants can only supply 206,000cu.m of freshwater. It lacks more than 215,000cu.m of freshwater to serve industrial and urban development and people’s daily activities.
In urban areas, freshwater is supplied by small and medium-sized plants operated by the Long An Water Supply Sewerage Joint Stock Company, Kien Tuong Water Supply Sewerage and Environment Joint Stock Company, and others.
In rural areas, small water supply stations provide water to fewer than 300 households.
Nearly 40 percent of the province's residents use freshwater, which is lower than the average national rate.
Authorities are concerned that the problem could become severe if they do not have solutions.
The provincial People’s Committee has instructed relevant agencies to adjust the water supply to increase the usage rate among residents.
The province also wants to reduce underground water exploitation gradually, and attract investment to build a network of freshwater supply stations.
It has asked ministries for funds to build five sluices to prevent saltwater intrusion in the provinces of Long An and Tien Giang, near Vam Co Tay River which supplies the Rach Chanh Water Plant.
The province plans to build a reservoir to store freshwater in Thanh Hoa district to supply water to nearly 12,000 households and for agricultural and industrial production.
In Can Duoc district’s Phuoc Tuy commune, which faced water shortage in the dry season, residents now have access to fresh water after the commune's People’s Committee allocated funds to upgrade water supply pipelines and presented water containers to people who live far from water wells. People have also been encouraged to use water economically.
The committee has called on enterprises to invest in water wells. The commune has nine wells that supply water to more than 2,000 households.
Long An is one of several Mekong Delta provinces severely affected by drought and saltwater intrusion every year. More than 8,000 households in the province lack fresh water.
In a similar situation, trees in mangrove forests in the Mekong Delta province of Sac Trang’s Vinh Chau town have died or are dying because of water shortage, according to the town’s Forest Protection Bureau.
Trees have died in a 1.5ha mangrove forest managed by the town’s People’s Committee and in a 175ha mangrove forest managed by the bureau.
The mangrove forests are mostly white mangrove and spotted mangrove more than 10 years old.
The upgrading and construction of a sea dyke and a dam outside the mangrove forests to prevent saltwater intrusion has contributed to water shortage, according to the bureau.
After the province built the dam at the Ho Be - Giong Chua Canal and rebuilt the Nam Doan Sluice in 2017, seawater was blocked from the forests.
The Giong Chua Canal, which provides water for the mangrove forests is silted, cannot transport sufficient water from the My Thanh River to supply the forests.
Hoang Van Thang, Chairman of the town’s People’s Committee, said prolonged drought and severe saltwater intrusion this year had contributed to water shortage.
The town is opening sluice No16 to take water to save the dying mangrove trees, and will choose a suitable time to replace dead mangrove trees and recover the forests.
This is the first time that many trees in the mangrove forests in Vinh Chau Town have died because of water shortage, according to the bureau./.
VNA