Content area

Abstract

Vietnamese communities in the Mekong Delta are faced with the substantial impacts of rising sea levels and salinity intrusion. The construction of embankments and dykes has historically been the principal strategy of the Vietnamese government to mitigate the effects of salinity intrusion on agricultural production. A predicted sea-level rise of 30 cm by the year 2050 is expected to accelerate salinity intrusion. This study combines hydrologic, agronomic and behavioural assessments to identify effective adaptation strategies reliant on land-use change (soft options) and investments in water infrastructure (hard options). As these strategies are managed within different policy portfolios, the political discussion has polarized between choices of either soft or hard options. This paper argues that an ensemble of hard and soft policies is likely to provide the most effective results for people's livelihoods in the Mekong Delta. The consequences of policy deliberations are likely to be felt beyond the Mekong Delta as levels of rice cultivation there also affect national and global food security.

Details

Title
Responding to rising sea levels in the Mekong Delta
Author
Smajgl, A; Toan, T Q; Nhan, D K; Ward, J; Trung, N H; Tri, L Q; Tri, V P D; Vu, P T
Pages
167-174
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Feb 2015
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
1758678X
e-ISSN
17586798
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1651530026
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Feb 2015