The Dong Nai provincial People’s Committee on  August 21 released a decision on prohibiting investment projects in  industries that use many chemicals during the production process.
The  industries include tanning, paper and pulp production from raw  materials, cassava starch processing, rubber latex processing (from  materials which have not undergone preliminary treatment), and basic  chemical production.
The investment projects in other industries  not listed in the decision must be located in industrial zones in Dong  Nai Province under the current regulations, not in any other places  outside industrial zones, according to the decision.
The local  authorities have stated they will give priority to high-tech,  energy-saving and environmentally-friendly projects, and projects to  develop support industries or make new materials.
The Ba Ria-Vung  Tau People’s Committee has said it will not attract steel projects,  especially projects on making structural steel and ingot steels, except  high-quality steel manufacturing projects.
The ban aims to ensure  provincial sustainable economic development which does not cause  environmental pollution, protect water sources, and effectively use land  and energy.
The other seven production fields have also been cited as “restricted areas” for investment projects for the same reason.
These  include cassava starch processing, rubber latex processing, basic  chemical production, dyeing, tanning, paper and pulp production, and  fish paste production.
The projects that may pollute the upper course and the water reservoirs in the province will also be rejected.
Ba  Ria-Vung Tau, which is a site of many steel manufacturers in Vietnam,  has five operational steel mills which churn out 3.25 million tons of  ingot steel a year. The ingot steel mills in the locality every day  generate 800 tons of furnace dust, steel slag and waste land.
It  is expected that two more steel mills would be put into operation by  2015, raising the total number of steel mills in the province to seven  and total production capacity to 4.75 million tons of ingot steel.
The  operational mills in Ba Ria-Vung Tau have steel output which makes up  65 percent of the country’s total output. They create a large source of  revenue for the province’s coffers.
Evsen so, the province still  has decided to reject steel projects in the future after realizing the  negative impact on the environment.
Provincial authorities are  also looking for capable investors for a project to build a factory to  treat furnace dust. For the time being, the dust has to be transported  to other places for treatment.
HCM City authorities have not  released the list of the industries in which investments are either  prohibited or restricted. However, for many years, the city has been  licensing only projects that utilize high technology and bring high  added value.
The Director of the Binh Duong provincial Planning  and Investment Department, Mai Hung Dung, also said most of the  investment projects licensed in the province this year are for support  industries. 
Source: VietNamNet Bridge