ECHO to Provide EUR2M to Support Drought-affected Vietnamese

The European Commission on Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection Department (ECHO) said it would provide EUR2 million in funding for emergency relief to support Vietnamese people who suffered from the severe drought which started in November last year in the Southeast Asian nation, according to Reuters. “This EU contribution will help provide life-saving assistance to affected families at this critical time, ensuring that their basic needs are met,” said Christos Stylianides, EU commissioner for humanitarian aid and crisis management. The drought, caused by El Nino has left one million Vietnamese people in urgent need of food assistance and two million people lacking access to drinking water, Europe’s humanitarian aid agency said. The country’s worst drought in 90 years coupled with seawater intrusion into the Mekong River delta have destroyed fruit, rice and sugar crops in the world’s third-largest rice exporter after India and Thailand. “The disruption in precipitation patterns has affected the livelihoods, food security and access to safe water of the people of Vietnam,” said Stylianides in a statement. Saltwater has encroached up the Mekong Delta up to 25 kilometers further than average years, according to ECHO. “Although the government had taken preparedness measures and launched some initiatives in anticipation, the scale of the current disaster has become much worse than initially foreseen, surpassing the local capacity to respond,” the statement said. El Nino drought leaves millions hungry and in need of drinking water in Vietnam. El Nino is an abnormal warming of waters in the equatorial Pacific that occurs once every three to four years. A strong El Nino would normally cause drought in wide swathes of Southeast Asia, with Indonesia and the Philippines bearing the brunt of the drought. The 2015/16 El NIno is the worst since the 1997/98 edition, which just happens to be the worst Nino in recorded history. Weather forecasters have warned of the possibility of a La Nina weather event, the opposite of El Nino, which could bring intense monsoon rains to Vietnam and other countries in Southeast Asia in the second half of 2016. Aside from rice, Vietnam is the second biggest producer of coffee in the world. (reuters.com June 20)