22/07/2018

CÁT BÀ ISLAND’S YOUTH CLEAN UP BEACHES

HAI PHONG — Up to 500 youth of Cát Hải Island District in the northern port city of Hải Phòng participated in a coastal cleanup campaign on Cát Bà Island yesterday morning.

The cleanup campaign attracted youth, mainly secondary and high school students, officers from the armed forces and those working at local administrative units.

Student collects waste on Tung Thu beach

The campaign is part of the Red River Delta Adaptation and Youth (READY) programme, a joint project conducted by the Asian Management and Development Institute, the non-profit Centre for Marinelife Conservation and Community Development and the Centre for Environment and Community Research.

Addressing the event’s launch ceremony, Hoàng Trung Cường, vice chairman of Cát Hải District’s People’s Committee, said “The percentage of solid waste collected in the two towns of Cát Hải and Cát Bà has reached 90 per cent of total dumped waste and in other communes has been 75 to 80 per cent.”

“However, solid waste treatment remains unsuitable, causing not only pollution to the environment, but also affecting socio-economic development and public health,” he added.

He called on local agencies, organisations, individuals, enterprises and the whole community to take action to solve pressing environmental problems and move towards a sustainable and green Cát Bà Town, in response to international coastal cleanup campaigns this year.

Local people and gabage collected on 1-4 Street

Groups of environmental volunteers collected garbage on Tùng Thu and Cát Cò beaches, in Tùng Dinh Lake and at the central port while fishing out waste from Cát Bà Bay and Lan Hạ Bay.

The collected waste was then classified into different categories.

Vũ Thị Mỹ Liên, secretary of Cát Hải District’s Youth Union, told Việt Nam News that besides volunteering on Saturdays and Sundays, local youth had also set up a volunteer team to take out garbage twice a week from the island’s bays. They also visited villages to disseminate environmental protection information to fishermen, following which, fishermen who raise marine animals in the bays have become more aware on removal of fish cages and garbage collection.

 

The cleanup campaign on Cát Bà Island held yesterday is one of a series of activities conducted within the framework of the READY project from 2015 until 2018 and aims to enhance the pioneering role and innovations of the youth in climate change adaptation in Red River Delta.

Ngô Công Chính, AMDI deputy head, said the READY project has selected youth as the core member to influence environmental protection and climate change adaptation actions because they are eager to learn, determined to take action and will be taking charge of important roles in the future. “We must take into account the long time, 20-30 years, up to even 100 years -- when talking about climate change, so that the youth can feel its impacts. If no action is taken from today, it is the young generation that will be most vulnerable to its effects in the future,” he said.

Located to the south of well-known Hạ Long Bay of Quảng Ninh Province, Cát Bà Island is a popular tourist destination in the north, with approximately half of its area covered by a National Park, which was recognised by UNESCO as a Biosphere Reserve of the Cát Bà archipelago.

Khanh Duong – VNS

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/environment/343304/cat-ba-islands-youth-clean-up-beaches.html#ETsw8MhIGr1deZpU.99

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