Wed, Apr 24, 2019, 16:09:00

The Center of Hands-on Actions and Networking for Growth and Environment (CHANGE), in collaboration with the German Consulate in Ho Chi Minh City, is organizing a "Feel the Air" photo exhibition that aims to raise public awareness on air pollution in Vietnam. The exhibition is free and open to the public from April 17-28 at the Deutsches Haus in HCMC's District 1.




A man burns straw on a field near Hue in central Vietnam. Photo by Nong Thanh Toan
Out of 732 photos submitted for a contest held to select the best for the ongoing exhibition, 34 were chosen. From May 13-17, these photographs will be displayed in a bus that will move to five major locations in the city. The bus will also carry information on AQI indicators (air quality index).

Hanoi and Saigon were recently named among the 15 most polluted cities in Southeast Asia. Hanoi in particular was ranked the second most polluted, according to the latest World Air Quality Report by AirVisual.
Hanoi's average PM2.5 level last year was 40.8 micrograms per cubic meter of air as opposed to 45.8 in 2017, according to Switzerland-based air quality monitor IQAir AirVisual's 2018 World Air Quality Report. Saigon’s air quality worsened last year to 26.9 from 23.6 in 2017.
Particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5) is regarded as the pollutant with the most adverse health impacts. Released by vehicles, industries and natural sources like dust, its width is a fraction of that of human hair, meaning it can get into the lungs and cause a number of diseases, including lung cancer.

Smog clouds a jam-packed Hanoi street. Photo by Nguyen Viet

According to the Institute for Environment and Resources in Ho Chi Minh, 99 percent of the total CO2 emissions in HCMC comes from traffic activity.





Over 60,000 people died in Vietnam in 2016 from strokes, heart diseases, lung cancer and a myriad of other ailments, all related to air pollution. That means each day, 165 died simply because they breathed.
Hanoi’s department of environment said the ratio of citizens that have pneumonia or have to be hospitalized for discomfort when breathing could be double by 2020 if the city does not have any means to reduce air pollution.
According to findings from Vietnam's National Center for Socio-Economic Information and Forecast (NCIF), both natural and manmade environmental problems will continue to consume about 0.6 percent of Vietnam's annual GDP until 2020.

Photos courtesy of CHANGE
Story by Dang Khoa
