The year before last, Vietnam celebrated the opening of its first Sabo dam in Son La province. This Japanese-designed dam is designed to prevent boulders and debris from falling during heavy rainfall while yet allowing water to flow through. Twelve of these kinds of structures are going to be constructed in the Nam Pam river basin.
The protective infrastructure, land-use planning, and early warning systems that make up Japan’s disaster prevention strategy are the three pillars that support the approach. There are approximately 15,000 people who are projected to directly benefit from an agreement between Japan and UNESCO that is boosting hazard mapping and school evacuation exercises in Nghe An, which is routinely pummeled by floods.
One million households of Hanoi are now connected to the treatment network thanks to a recently constructed wastewater treatment plant that was constructed with the assistance of Japanese technical and financial assistance.By means of infrastructure, education, and early warning programs supported by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Japan is imparting its decades of experience in disaster management to Vietnam.
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