• An Giang
  • Binh Duong
  • Binh Phuoc
  • Binh Thuan
  • Binh Dinh
  • Bac Lieu
  • Bac Giang
  • Bac Kan
  • Bac Ninh
  • Ben Tre
  • Cao Bang
  • Ca Mau
  • Can Tho
  • Dien Bien
  • Da Nang
  • Da Lat
  • Dak Lak
  • Dak Nong
  • Dong Nai
  • Dong Thap
  • Gia Lai
  • Ha Noi
  • Ho Chi Minh
  • Ha Giang
  • Ha Nam
  • Ha Tinh
  • Hoa Binh
  • Hung Yen
  • Hai Duong
  • Hai Phong
  • Hau Giang
  • Khanh Hoa
  • Kien Giang
  • Kon Tum
  • Lai Chau
  • Long An
  • Lao Cai
  • Lam Dong
  • Lang Son
  • Nam Dinh
  • Nghe An
  • Ninh Binh
  • Ninh Thuan
  • Phu Tho
  • Phu Yen
  • Quang Binh
  • Quang Nam
  • Quang Ngai
  • Quang Ninh
  • Quang Tri
  • Soc Trang
  • Son La
  • Thanh Hoa
  • Thai Binh
  • Thai Nguyen
  • Thua Thien Hue
  • Tien Giang
  • Tra Vinh
  • Tuyen Quang
  • Tay Ninh
  • Vinh Long
  • Vinh Phuc
  • Vung Tau
  • Yen Bai

Disaster relief budget reaches record high

VGP - The Government has allocated a record State budget sum of VND8.5 trillion (US$400 million) to help 43 provinces and cities overcome natural disaster consequences, said Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Nguyen Hoang Hiep.

May 10, 2024 3:20 PM GMT+7
Disaster relief budget reaches record high- Ảnh 1.

The Deputy Minister released the figure at a conference on disaster prevention in Ha Noi on Friday.

Of the budget, VND 4 trillion will go to 13 Mekong Delta provinces to prevent coastal erosion.

In addition, provinces and cities mobilized over VND 3 trillion of local budget to prevent natural disasters.

Addressing the event, Deputy Prime Minister Tran Luu Quang, who is also head of the National Steering Committee for Natural Disasters Prevention and Control underscored the need to improve the overall quality of weather forecasts, enhance pre-storm inspections, and diversify all forms of communications and raise awareness at all levels.

Tran took the occasion to call upon international organizations to share information and experience, and to support human resource training in responding to and overcoming natural disasters, while considering additional funding for natural disaster prevention and control.

Meteorologists warned that El Nino is gradually weakening and is anticipated to change to La Nina in the last months of the year, which may possibly cause heavy rain in the central region, a scenario similar to the historic flooding that led to catastrophic consequences throughout central localities in 2020.

The transformation of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon, that comprises the warming phase of El Nino and the cooling phase of La Nina, combined with climate change is fueling the extremes of weather and climate.

Between 11 and 13 tropical storms are due to form in the East Sea, with between five to seven of them expected to slam into the country’s mainland, mostly from September to November.

With El Nino likely to shift to the neutral state and La Nina to emerge in the second half of the year, the central region will probably have to brace itself for subsequent spells of heavy rain that may trigger severe flooding, flash floods, and landslides, analysed the senior meteorologist.

In 2020, the historic flooding wreaked great havoc to the central region, taking the lives of 138 people, leaving 16 others go missing, and injuring 398 people. In addition, more than 6,200 houses collapsed, and nearly 380,000 other houses were inundated with floodwater./.