HCM City has announced that it will pump an estimated VNĐ11.61 trillion (US$505 million) into 84 projects in an attempt to reduce floods over the next five years.
                             
    
        
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            | Heavy  rain causes flood in a road of HCM City. The city has announced that it  will pump an estimated VNĐ11.61 trillion (US$505 million) into 84  projects in an attempt to reduce floods over the next five years. —  Photo duongbo.vn | 
    
The  ambitious plan was unveiled at a conference held last Friday by the  city’s Flood Prevention Agency and HCM City National University, which  attracted many scientists and experts.
The  top priorities include dredging and upgrading the Tham Lương-Bến Cát  and Rạch Nước Lên Canal with a total length of 32 kilometers, which is  expected to help the city drain water for around 14,500 hectares.
Other  top priorities include dredging the 8.2 km Xuyên Tâm Rivulet; building  eight sluices to control tides and flooding; and construction of nearly  20 kilometers of dykes along high-prone sections of the Sài Gòn River.
According  to conference participants, though southern Việt Nam is in the midst of  a historic drought, a major concern regarding the future of the region,  and in particular HCM City, is flooding.
The  annual monsoon rains regularly flood sections of the city, and even  high tides on the Sài Gòn River can inundate low-lying areas.
Upgrading  four main water sewers, namely Bà Chính, Thủ Đảo, Ông Bế and Thầy Tiêu,  is also an important part of the city’s flood control programme.
The  city has implemented programmes in response to climate change as it  expects increasingly severe flooding in the coming years.
The conference heard several solutions from scientists and experts to cope with the flooding.
Đỗ  Tấn Long, head of the Steering Centre for the Urban Flood Control  Programme, said: “The city has built water drainage systems that have  met only 40 per cent of practical needs, while urban management and  forecasting still has several limitations.”  
Long  proposed that the city develop a master plan on construction of a water  drainage system and construction of reservoirs and anti-flood  irrigation systems.  
Lê  Thành Công, director of the Design Consulting Company, said it was  necessary to seek ways to fully use existing canals and rivulets for  water drainage.
Professor  Nguyễn Minh Hòa agreed with Công, but added that the city must unblock  all the existing canals and rivulets. “Doing this would improve flood  prevention efforts.”
“Rapid  urbanisation has led to the loss of thousands of hectares of natural  reservoirs. The leveling of canals, rivulets and ponds to build houses  has become all too common,” he explained.
Bùi  Việt Hưng from the HCM City National University said that the city  should closely co-operate with the provinces of Đồng Nai and Long An to  ensure the effectiveness of anti-flood activities.
“Construction  projects that have leveled a considerable part of Long An’s Soài Rạp  River have also affected the Sài Gòn River’s water level at tidal peak.  So, the current measures to construct sluices to control tides cannot  completely settle the flooding problem,” Hưng said