Flood prevention works in Saigon between 2016 and 2020 are estimated to cost more than US$4.2 billion, according to its Steering Centre of the Urban Flood Control Program.
VNS reported, at a meeting held to review the program’s implementation on May 18, the Steering Centre’s deputy director, said the amount included US$960.5 billion from the private sector.
The flood prevention projects include construction of three irrigation reservoirs, upgrades to the storm drain system and the Xuyen Tam Canal, and construction of seven wastewater treatment plants.
Two and a half years after starting the program the centre has achieved the goal of preventing flooding in the city’s 550sq.km central area and five neighbouring areas, according to the Steering Centre’s deputy director.
This year seven more main streets and 445 alleys will become flooding-free.
River tides too flood many streets, but four have now put this problem behind them.
Many of the projects in the program had been delayed due to shortage of funds, and the People’s Committee should seek financing from the private sector and official development assistance.
It should instruct relevant agencies to take severe action against encroachment of drains and illegal filling of canals, he said.
Canals and channels should be regularly dredged, he said.
Mr. Nguyen Thanh Phong, Chairman of the city People’s Committee, called on relevant agencies and districts to co-ordinate with the centre for flood prevention.
Urban management and co-ordination were “limited”, leading to low effectiveness of flood-prevention efforts, he said.
The centre should earmark more spaces for water storage and do further research into water drainage, he said.
There were many reasons for flooding, including tides, heavy rains, failure to dredge canals and channels, and others, he said.
So many different measures were required and applied simultaneously to resolve the problem, he added.
By VNS