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Schools, colleges begin reducing use of plastics

Educational institutions in several provinces and Ho Chi Minh City are encouraging their students and staff not to use single-use plastic water bottles and straws as part of the UN’s global Beat Plastic Pollution campaign.
Schools, colleges begin reducing use of plastics ảnh 1Students at the HCM City Open University bring their own bottles and take water from water purification equipment installed on the campus (Photo courtesy of the university)

HCM City (VNS/VNA) - Educational institutionsin several provinces and Ho Chi Minh City are encouraging their students andstaff not to use single-use plastic water bottles and straws as part of theUN’s global Beat Plastic Pollution campaign.

An announcement by the HCM City Open University onApril 11 said it plans to stop providing single-use plastic water bottles forlecturers from May 15. They will use their own bottles to fill water providedin staff rooms.

On May 5 it will provide reusable water bottles to alllecturers and other staff.

Bottled water and single-use plastic glasses, dishes,straws, and spoons will not be used at meetings, workshops or conferences fromMay 5.

According to the university, it discards 124,920single-use plastic water bottles used in meetings and events every year.

It is also encouraging its students to bring their ownbottles and use water coolers installed in the campus.

Teachers and students at Hoa Hoi Secondary School inBa Ria-Vung Tau province’s Xuyen Moc district use straws made from citronellaby students Nguyen Thi Bao Ngan and Nguyen Huu Khang.

Their invention won the third prize in the provincialScience Technology Contest for students in 2018-2019.

At Vung Tau High School’s canteen, styrofoam boxes areno longer used for food sold to students.

The school’s students also know they should not useplastic glasses and straws and styrofoam boxes.

Nguyen Van Ba, Deputy Director of the provincialDepartment of Education and Training, told Ba Ria-Vung Tau Online newspaperthat his department instructed all schools in the province last month tominimise the use of single-use plastic products to protect the environment. Itimmediately achieved the intended results, he indicated.

Reusable water bottles have replaced single-use onesat department meetings as instructed by the provincial Party Committee, headded.     

At the Ly Tu Trong High School for Gifted Students inthe Mekong Delta city of Can Tho, teachers and students have been encouragednot to use plastic products for the last one year.

Teachers bring their own reusable water bottles toschool and lunch boxes for food they buy near the school.

The school’s Zero Waste Club teaches students how toclassify garbage and sell recyclable waste. The money thus raised is used forthe club’s operation.

According to the UN, each year 500 billion plasticbags are used, 13 million tonnes of plastic leak into the oceans and 17 millionbarrels of oil are used for plastic production.

Globally, a million plastic bottles are bought everyminute and 100,000 marine animals are killed by plastics every year. It takes100 years for plastic to degrade in the environment.

Ninety percent of water bottles are found to containplastic particles as is 83 percent of tap water, 50 percent of consumerplastics are single use and 10 percent of all human-generated waste is plastic.

About half of all of the plastic waste that ends up inthe oceans comes from just five countries: China, Indonesia, the Philippines,Thailand, and Vietnam.

These countries are experiencing rapid economicgrowth, which is reducing poverty rates. But as these economies grow,consumption booms - and so does the use of plastic goods.-VNS/VNA
VNA

The Phuoc Thuan Border Guard Station and competent units in Ho Tram commune, Ho Chi Minh City, on June 4 rescued a rare sea turtle caught in a fishing net and safely released it back into the sea.

The elongated tortoise is one of the most beautiful and rare terrestrial tortoise species, listed in both the Vietnam Red Data Book and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species. It typically inhabits tropical and subtropical forests and plays an important role in maintaining ecological balance. However, due to illegal trade and habitat loss, its wild population has been declining sharply.

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)-funded technical cooperation project on drainage management for climate resilience in Can Tho aims to improve planning capacity for wastewater collection, enhance operations and management of existing treatment plants, and the city’s ability to run public awareness campaigns.

A series of environmental and marine-related events to held in the central province of Nghe An from June 4-6 will generate a broad social impact, helping transform awareness into action and commitments into concrete results, and contributing to Vietnam’s goals of green growth, circular economy development, net-zero emissions and harmonious coexistence between people and nature.

According to marine experts, the repeated appearance of dolphins near the shore of Cai Chien Island is a positive sign that the local marine environment is well protected.

According to the Department of Forestry and Forest Protection, as of May 12, more than 1,350 communes and wards nationwide were under the highest forest fire warning of Level 5, while 294 others at Level 4.

To support conservation efforts, the national park has invested in a comprehensive system of breeding enclosures, quarantine areas, reproductive research facilities, wastewater treatment systems and surveillance cameras.

The climate resilience and sustainable infrastructure project in Lang Son consists of two main components, focusing on sustainable infrastructure and environmental improvement; and technical assistance and capacity building, with AFD experts expected to train project management officials and local agencies in disaster response and climate adaptation.

Beyond helping Hai Phong tackle environmental issues, Eco Hopia's primary objective is to transfer advanced technologies to Vietnam, enabling local partners to master them and contribute to the sustainable development of the country's agricultural sector.

The number and activity of tropical cyclones and depressions over the East Sea, internationally known as the South China Sea, and their direct impacts on mainland Vietnam are expected to be comparable to the multi-year average. The long-term average over the East Sea is 5.2 typhoons, with 1.9 making landfall.

Launched in 2021 with funding from the Norwegian people through WWF-Norway and WWF-Vietnam, the “Hue – Plastic Smart City in Central Vietnam” project aims to help Hue protect rivers, wetlands and coastal ecosystems from plastic pollution while building the city into a model plastic-reduced urban area in central Vietnam.

The Bac Lieu Forest Protection Unit under the provincial Forest Protection Sub-Department said that it had completed procedures to transfer and release the animal into its natural habitat.

Initiatives on biodiversity finance, carbon credits, public – private partnerships, nature-based tourism, and private sector investment are creating more opportunities to increase resources for ecosystem conservation and restoration, said an official.

Vietnam has established a network of 180 terrestrial and marine nature reserve covering more than 2.67 million hectares. These sites are being further strengthened to improve ecological connectivity, restore habitats and conserve endangered species. Forest cover remains stable at over 42%, contributing to water protection, climate adaptation and carbon absorption.

The animals included two masked palm civets, four stump-tailed macaques, and seven rhesus macaques. All belong to Group IIB under Circular No. 85/2025/TT-BNNMT issued by the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment on the management of endangered, precious and rare species, as well as the implementation of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

The animal was identified as a clouded monitor (Varanus nebulosus), weighing approximately two kilograms and measuring around 70 centimetres in length. The species belongs to Group IB — a category of endangered and rare forest wildlife species given the highest level of protection in Vietnam, with all forms of commercial exploitation and use strictly prohibited.

The stump-tailed macaque, scientifically known as Macaca arctoides, is classified as a rare and endangered species under Group IIB in Vietnam’s regulations on endangered wildlife management.

Ho Chi Minh City aims to push urban green coverage above 1 sq.m per person by 2030, while stepping up greenhouse gas reduction initiatives on the way to Net Zero by 2050.

Designed to process 2,000 tonnes of waste per day and generate 45MW of electricity for the national grid, the project is the first high-tech waste-to-energy plant in southwestern Hanoi, where large-scale solid waste treatment facilities have long been lacking.

The figure includes losses of 6.7 billion VND in Cao Bang province and 3.5 billion VND in Dak Lak province, while Quang Ninh and Thanh Hoa provinces have yet to report estimated damages.