Society
Leading companies take steps to reduce waste
Published
2 years agoon
Gia Lộc
HCM CITY — More companies in Việt Nam are carrying out programmes to reduce waste and achieve sustainable, environmentally-friendly operations.
The campaign “Go Green” from TikiNOW Smart Logistics, for example, has contributed to sustainable and eco-friendly operations after one year of implementation.
In September last year, TikiNOW Smart Logistics (TNSL), Tiki’s logistics entity, kicked off “Go Green”, which focuses on two key approaches: replacement and reduction.
The first step is to replace non-compostable plastic packaging materials with eco-friendly ones with a much shorter decomposition time. Specifically, bubble wraps, commonly used to protect fragile items but need 100 years to completely decompose, are now replaced with carton papers, which need only two months for decomposition.
Foams that hold products in place and take as long as one million years to decompose are replaced with thick papers. Bulky goods are covered with 2 to 3 layers of protective papers and with biodegradable plastic wraps to help minimise damages from impacts during transportation.
Together with replacement, reduction is also applied as another major approach in TNSL’s green operations chain.
Before the campaign began, there were 16 kinds of packaging boxes with different sizes at Tiki warehouses. The box sizes, however, did not fit the items’ actual sizes. This resulted in items being packed in much larger boxes, which required extra amounts of material such as foam or plastic during transportation.
Henry Low, CEO of TNSL, said: “This not only requires much more packaging material than actual demand, but also causes excess air in transportation, which leads to neither environmentally friendly nor efficient operations.”
Since the “Go Green” campaign was launched, TNSL has optimised packaging box sizes at all fulfilment centres. All products before being warehoused are scanned for size measurement and storage by Cubiscan machines.
When packing, warehouse workers scan the code of a single product or of all the products in one order, and the system recommends the most suitable box size. This not only cuts down packaging time but also saves a large portion of other extra materials. The size and weight of transport are also better optimized.
The number of box sizes at TNSL warehouses has been reduced to nine types. And 85 per cent of packaging materials at TNSL are now eco-friendly. The proportion of packaging materials in use has also halved, which has led to a decline in cost of 50 per cent.
In order to accomplish these results and progress to further improvement in the coming time, commitment by all staff and management is essential. Human resource training is considered a key factor in the success of the campaign. Personnel at the TNSL Fulfillment Center are equipped with knowledge about limiting plastic waste and practical skills that align with the new packaging standards.
Low said: “Conducting this campaign is not about catching temporary trends, but is about our long-term strategy in building and developing a sustainable and responsible supply chain.”
Another company pursuing waste reduction is Coca-Cola Beverages Vietnam Limited, which wants to have all of its packaging to be recyclable by 2025, and to have at least 50 per cent recycled material used in its packaging by 2030.
The company has also launched a programme to remove plastic shrink film on Dasani bottled water, and aims to collect and recycle a bottle or can for each one sold by 2030.
The company said these actions reflect its commitment to its long-term strategy for managing plastic waste, as part of Coca-Cola’s global strategy called “World Without Waste”.
Coca-Cola is co-operating with the Việt Nam Business Council for Sustainable Development, Việt Nam Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Unilever and Dow to carry out a “Zero Waste to Nature” programme which promotes a circular economy and raises public awareness, seeks effective recycling technology, and builds new habits of responsible waste management in society.
Coca-Cola Vietnam is one of the founding members of the Packaging Recycling Organisation Vietnam (PRO Việt Nam), which shares their goals, vision and responsibilities in promoting a circular economy in Việt Nam through activities of reducing, sorting, collecting and recycling waste.
PRO Vietnam
PRO Vietnam is a coalition of leading FDI and Vietnamese companies with high prestige, diverse experiences and especially an earnest responsibility to Vietnamese consumers and to the environment. This includes the consumer goods and packaging industries, united in a vision to work with the Government in providing a long-term impetus to packaging and recycling in the country, making Việt Nam green, clean and beautiful.
According to PRO Vietnam, rapid urbanisation and consumerism combined with the lack of an anti-litter culture and absence of recycling mindset among the population is building up to a large-scale litter and ecological problem in Việt Nam.
Most of Việt Nam’s mismanaged packaging waste is ending up in landfills and spoiling the country’s long coastline, according to PRO Vietnam.
Việt Nam ranks among the top four countries with the largest volume of mismanaged plastic waste in the world. A huge portion of inorganic waste in Việt Nam is packaging, which does not get treated properly.
PRO Vietnam is supporting the Government in the “Recycle” aspect of the 3Rs (Reduce – Reuse – Recycle).
The focus of PRO Vietnam is to build partnerships between local governments and stakeholders in the value chain for packaging in order to increase recycling.
PRO Vietnam is focused on incentivising the recycling industry to increase packaging collections via the informal and formal sectors, in addition to education and awareness to drive behaviour change by promoting the circular economy for packaging.
PRO Vietnam aims to collaborate with the recycling business, driving a circular economy of packaging in Việt Nam by 2030. This model will recreate an entire ecosystem of consumer good packages, from design and manufacture to collection after usage, recycling and reuse, giving a second life to packaging waste.
URC, a leading food and beverage manufacturer in Việt Nam, was a founding member of PRO Vietnam. As part of the group’s strategy outlined last year, it wants PRO Vietnam to contribute to a green, clean and beautiful Việt Nam by promoting a circular economy model through the product packaging and recycling process.
Laurent Levan, president and general director of URC Vietnam, said on the Pro Vietnam website: “We understand that packaging can bring convenience as well as guarantee food hygiene, but it also creates a burden of waste if not handled properly.”
Acknowledging its responsibility in the plastic waste crisis, Levan said that PRO Vietnam “wants to join hands with the community to become part of the solution”.
Maintaining sustainable development and accompanying the community to adapt to climate change and prevent pollution are not only the company’s responsibility to society, but also offer competitive advantages that help URC build a resilient value chain and closer relationships with consumers, the company said. —
Source: https://vietnamnews.vn/society/793248/leading-companies-take-steps-to-reduce-waste.html
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Society
Heatwave to hit north-central, northern Vietnam this week
Published
2 hours agoon
March 26, 2023A heatwave is forecast to hit north-central Vietnamese provinces starting Tuesday before expanding to northern localities.
The heatwave will affect the localities from Thanh Hoa Province to Thua Thien-Hue Province from Tuesday to Saturday, according to the National Center for Hydro-meteorological Forecasting.
The highest temperatures will be around 35-37 degrees Celsius during this period.
Humidity will be quite low, about 35-50 percent.
The weather pattern poses a high risk of fires and explosions in residential areas as well as bushfires.
It can also cause dehydration, exhaustion, and heatstroke when people are exposed to high temperatures for a long time.
The hot weather will also hit the Red River Delta as well as northern Son La and Hoa Binh Provinces from Wednesday to Friday, with the average highs around 35-37 degrees Celsius.
In central and south-central provinces, the highest temperatures will be 34-36 degrees Celsius, while humidity will be between 45 and 55 percent.
Meanwhile, the ongoing hot weather in southern Vietnam will continue over the next few days.
The average highs will be 35-37 degrees Celsius, and humidity about 40-50 percent.
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
A heatwave is forecast to hit north-central Vietnamese provinces starting Tuesday before expanding to northern localities.
The heatwave will affect the localities from Thanh Hoa Province to Thua Thien-Hue Province from Tuesday to Saturday, according to the National Center for Hydro-meteorological Forecasting.
The highest temperatures will be around 35-37 degrees Celsius during this period.
Humidity will be quite low, about 35-50 percent.
The weather pattern poses a high risk of fires and explosions in residential areas as well as bushfires.
It can also cause dehydration, exhaustion, and heatstroke when people are exposed to high temperatures for a long time.
The hot weather will also hit the Red River Delta as well as northern Son La and Hoa Binh Provinces from Wednesday to Friday, with the average highs around 35-37 degrees Celsius.
In central and south-central provinces, the highest temperatures will be 34-36 degrees Celsius, while humidity will be between 45 and 55 percent.
Meanwhile, the ongoing hot weather in southern Vietnam will continue over the next few days.
The average highs will be 35-37 degrees Celsius, and humidity about 40-50 percent.
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230321/heatwave-to-hit-northcentral-northern-vietnam-this-week/72187.html
Society
Vietnamese couple cited for performing scooter stunts on mountain pass
Published
10 hours agoon
March 25, 2023A Vietnamese married couple had their scooter seized by police officers and will face punishment for performing acrobatics while riding at a dangerous bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam.
Police officers in Phu Loc District, central Thua Thien-Hue Province said on Monday afternoon that they determined the couple in question include Nguyen The A., 35, and Nguyen Thi Kim Ng., 24, both of whom are local residents.
A 30-second video capturing A. and Ng.’s daredevil stunts circulated on social media on Sunday.
|
This supplied photo shows Nguyen Thi Kim Ng.’s scooter being seized by police officers in Phu Loc District, Thua Thien-Hue Province, Vietnam. |
In the video, Ng. carried A. on the scooter while both were not wearing helmets at a double-hairpin bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass, which connects Thua Thien-Hue and Da Nang City.
Then, A., from the passenger seat, leaned forward and held the handlebars to steer the scooter while his left leg was still left in the footrest for the back seat and the right leg was stretched out on the vehicle.
At that time, there were many vehicles running on Hai Van Mountain Pass, with some motorcyclists worried about the couple’s performance and pulling over to the side of the road for their safety.
|
A bird’s-eye view of a dangerous bend where reckless riders often show off their riding skills on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam. Photo: T. Tri / Tien Phong |
The video drew the attention of police officers and prompted an investigation, which resulted in Phu Loc District officers’ summoning A. and Ng. to the police station.
According to their testimony, A. and Ng. are husband and wife and the scooter with the plate number 75K1-510.16 they used in the video is registered to Ng. at the district’s police office.
The couple performed the acrobatics after they and a group of friends had just returned from bathing in a stream near Hai Van Mountain Pass.
|
A young man shows off his skill of steering a motorbike with no hands at the slope of a dangerous bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam. Photo: T. Tri / Tien Phong |
The incident was recorded by a person at the site and posted on social media.
Phu Loc police officers seized Ng.’s scooter and handed the case over to their colleagues in Da Nang’s Lien Chieu District, where the bend is located, to handle the couple in accordance with the law for their dangerous and unsafe behavior on the street.
The 24km scenic and twisty road of Hai Van Mountain Pass is always a favorite of motorbike adventurers, with many reckless riders often showing off their riding skills there.
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
A Vietnamese married couple had their scooter seized by police officers and will face punishment for performing acrobatics while riding at a dangerous bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam.
Police officers in Phu Loc District, central Thua Thien-Hue Province said on Monday afternoon that they determined the couple in question include Nguyen The A., 35, and Nguyen Thi Kim Ng., 24, both of whom are local residents.
A 30-second video capturing A. and Ng.’s daredevil stunts circulated on social media on Sunday.
|
This supplied photo shows Nguyen Thi Kim Ng.’s scooter being seized by police officers in Phu Loc District, Thua Thien-Hue Province, Vietnam. |
In the video, Ng. carried A. on the scooter while both were not wearing helmets at a double-hairpin bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass, which connects Thua Thien-Hue and Da Nang City.
Then, A., from the passenger seat, leaned forward and held the handlebars to steer the scooter while his left leg was still left in the footrest for the back seat and the right leg was stretched out on the vehicle.
At that time, there were many vehicles running on Hai Van Mountain Pass, with some motorcyclists worried about the couple’s performance and pulling over to the side of the road for their safety.
|
A bird’s-eye view of a dangerous bend where reckless riders often show off their riding skills on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam. Photo: T. Tri / Tien Phong |
The video drew the attention of police officers and prompted an investigation, which resulted in Phu Loc District officers’ summoning A. and Ng. to the police station.
According to their testimony, A. and Ng. are husband and wife and the scooter with the plate number 75K1-510.16 they used in the video is registered to Ng. at the district’s police office.
The couple performed the acrobatics after they and a group of friends had just returned from bathing in a stream near Hai Van Mountain Pass.
|
A young man shows off his skill of steering a motorbike with no hands at the slope of a dangerous bend on Hai Van Mountain Pass in central Vietnam. Photo: T. Tri / Tien Phong |
The incident was recorded by a person at the site and posted on social media.
Phu Loc police officers seized Ng.’s scooter and handed the case over to their colleagues in Da Nang’s Lien Chieu District, where the bend is located, to handle the couple in accordance with the law for their dangerous and unsafe behavior on the street.
The 24km scenic and twisty road of Hai Van Mountain Pass is always a favorite of motorbike adventurers, with many reckless riders often showing off their riding skills there.
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230321/vietnamese-couple-cited-for-performing-scooter-stunts-on-mountain-pass/72186.html
The seriously-degraded, stinky state of public toilets has become an affliction for people in Hanoi, which has about 400 public bathrooms serving a population of more than 8.3 million.
Using public toilets has become a nightmare for people and tourists in the Vietnamese capital city.
At My Dinh Bus Station, one of the biggest bus depots in Hanoi handling thousands of passengers every day, many public toilets are overgrown with wild plants as observed by Tien Phong (Youth) newspaper reporters.
|
A public toilet is overgrown with wild plants on Nguyen Hoang Street in Nam Tu Liem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
At the back of one of those bathrooms on Nguyen Hoang Street, a beverage stall has been established.
Inside the bathroom, there are two toilet compartments for males and females, with one of them being closed, accompanied by an overpowering stench.
In that sole operational toilet compartment, one broken urinal was unusable and sealed with a plastic bag.
|
A urinal is sealed with a plastic bag inside a public toilet in Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The handle to flush the toilet was missing and the hand wash basin was not working.
After using the toilet, people have to use a bucket to pour water into it.
Despite all of those problems, toilet users are expected to give an employee stationed there from VND3,000 (US$0.13) to VND5,000 ($0.21) after every use.
|
A man relieves himself outside a public toilet at My Dinh Bus Station in Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The Tien Phong reporters witnessed the same situation at another public toilet along Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District.
“This toilet is completely free, users don’t have to pay anything,” said Lieu, a sanitation worker there.
On the same street, a different public toilet designed with four stalls was closed on Sunday afternoon.
|
A public toilet on Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
According to a staff member, the toilet has just been repaired and cannot be used yet.
“There are really very few public toilets around this large West Lake,” said Nguyen Anh Minh after using a public toilet near the lake.
“I had to go a long way before finding one here, but its quality is very poor as the inside is smelly and dirty.
|
A public toilet is closed on Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
“I was reluctant to use it but I had no choice.
“After using it, I think I feel sick.”
As counted by Tien Phong, there are only two public toilets around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, insufficient for the large number of visitors to the top tourist attraction in the capital city.
|
A public toilet around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The outside of those two public toilets looked quite modern and new, but the inside smelled strongly and one of the doors was also broken.
People often have to get in line for their turn to use the restrooms.
“I find the smell here unpleasant and the number of people with demand are high,” said Hoang Hai Yen, 21.
|
A door is broken at a public toilet around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
“Every time I step into similar public toilets across Hanoi, I feel disgusted.
“I hope Hanoi will build more public toilets in tourist destinations for residents and tourists to use.
“Moreover, public toilets need to be deodorized and cleaned more often.”
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
The seriously-degraded, stinky state of public toilets has become an affliction for people in Hanoi, which has about 400 public bathrooms serving a population of more than 8.3 million.
Using public toilets has become a nightmare for people and tourists in the Vietnamese capital city.
At My Dinh Bus Station, one of the biggest bus depots in Hanoi handling thousands of passengers every day, many public toilets are overgrown with wild plants as observed by Tien Phong (Youth) newspaper reporters.
|
A public toilet is overgrown with wild plants on Nguyen Hoang Street in Nam Tu Liem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
At the back of one of those bathrooms on Nguyen Hoang Street, a beverage stall has been established.
Inside the bathroom, there are two toilet compartments for males and females, with one of them being closed, accompanied by an overpowering stench.
In that sole operational toilet compartment, one broken urinal was unusable and sealed with a plastic bag.
|
A urinal is sealed with a plastic bag inside a public toilet in Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The handle to flush the toilet was missing and the hand wash basin was not working.
After using the toilet, people have to use a bucket to pour water into it.
Despite all of those problems, toilet users are expected to give an employee stationed there from VND3,000 (US$0.13) to VND5,000 ($0.21) after every use.
|
A man relieves himself outside a public toilet at My Dinh Bus Station in Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The Tien Phong reporters witnessed the same situation at another public toilet along Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District.
“This toilet is completely free, users don’t have to pay anything,” said Lieu, a sanitation worker there.
On the same street, a different public toilet designed with four stalls was closed on Sunday afternoon.
|
A public toilet on Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
According to a staff member, the toilet has just been repaired and cannot be used yet.
“There are really very few public toilets around this large West Lake,” said Nguyen Anh Minh after using a public toilet near the lake.
“I had to go a long way before finding one here, but its quality is very poor as the inside is smelly and dirty.
|
A public toilet is closed on Trich Sai Street in Tay Ho District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
“I was reluctant to use it but I had no choice.
“After using it, I think I feel sick.”
As counted by Tien Phong, there are only two public toilets around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, insufficient for the large number of visitors to the top tourist attraction in the capital city.
|
A public toilet around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
The outside of those two public toilets looked quite modern and new, but the inside smelled strongly and one of the doors was also broken.
People often have to get in line for their turn to use the restrooms.
“I find the smell here unpleasant and the number of people with demand are high,” said Hoang Hai Yen, 21.
|
A door is broken at a public toilet around Hoan Kiem Lake in Hoan Kiem District, Hanoi. Photo: Pham Tuan / Tien Phong |
“Every time I step into similar public toilets across Hanoi, I feel disgusted.
“I hope Hanoi will build more public toilets in tourist destinations for residents and tourists to use.
“Moreover, public toilets need to be deodorized and cleaned more often.”
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230321/public-toilets-cause-for-concern-in-hanoi/72172.html

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