USAID, partners launch US$2.9 million project to protect Mekong Delta's habitat
The project was announced during U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris’s visit to Vietnam in August and launched today.
A three-year project funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) kicked off on Oct 21 to protect Vietnam's natural habitats in the Mekong Delta region, increase the sustainability of fisheries, enhance climate change adaptation, and improve biodiversity conservation.
The US$2.9 million project, which was announced during US Vice President Kamala Harris’s visit to Vietnam in August, will be jointly conducted by the USAID, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and the Directorate of Fisheries of the Vietnam Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.
The Mekong Delta and its islands are home to 70% of Vietnam’s mangroves and 90% of its seagrass beds. Fed by the sediment and nutrients from the Mekong River, these habitats support Vietnam’s richest fishing grounds but are under growing threat.
The delta’s mangrove forests, which provide nursery habitat for sea bass, snapper, and other commercially important species, and important protection for coastal communities from storm surges, are declining due to sea level rise.
The Mekong Delta and its islands are home to 70% of Vietnam’s mangroves and 90% of its seagrass beds. Photo: US Embassy in Vietnam. |
The delta’s crucial fishery habitats are further threatened by environmental pressures including prolonged droughts, rising temperatures, and aquaculture demand for groundwater, and intensive near-shore fishing which has depleted fish stocks, causing cascading ecological damage.
By partnering with businesses, provincial governments, the management board of Phu Quoc Marine Protected Area (MPA) of Phu Quoc National Park, and fishing communities, the project will work to mitigate threats to coastal biodiversity and fisheries and enhance coastal resilience in the Mekong Delta.
The project’s activities will focus on the delta’s lowest-lying and most vulnerable coastlines along the East and West Seas, Phu Quoc MPA, and three small island clusters in the West Sea (Hai Tac, Ba Lua, Nam Du).
The main components of the project include strengthening the management of Phu Quoc MPA for more effective habitat and species conservation, establishing a network of locally managed marine areas to protect coral reefs, seagrass beds in three island clusters, and exploring solutions to conserve and expand mangrove forests to increase fish nursery habitat and coastal biodiversity.
It is expected that the project’s outcomes will contribute to addressing the systemic threats in the Mekong Delta, in support of ongoing measures being taken by the Government of Vietnam, such as the revised Fisheries Law, 2018 Resolution 36, Resolution 120, and 2019 Planning Law.
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