Vietnam’s coal industry was hit by one of its worst environmental disasters this year after torrential rain flooded its coal hub in the northeast Quang Ninh province, causing landslides and toxic coal ash spills.
Mong Duong : Months after the flood, housewife Dao Thi Tuyet’s neighbourhood in northeast Vietnam is unrecognisable. The muddy stream running past her front door used to be the main road.
Record rains lashed the mining town of Mong Duong in July, causing a landslide of coal ash that swept through Tuyet’s community of 100 households.
“We told each other: ‘Just run! How to save anything when the sludge and rocks are falling down?’ I’ve never felt terror like that before,” said Tuyet.
The main doors of housewife Tuyet's home were washed away by the deluge. (Photo: Tan Qiuyi)
The deluge came from the mountain of coal waste right next to the neighbourhood, and questions remain over the cause of the spill. Residents say the dump site did not have a visible dam or retaining wall.
Mong Duong is one of the many towns across Vietnam’s vast Quang Ninh province where coal is at the heart of the local economy.
The mountain of coal waste defines Mong Duong's landscape. (Photo: Tan Qiuyi)
Every resident Channel NewsAsia spoke to in the area has a father, son, wife, or mother working in the coal sector. The recent coal ash spill has destroyed their homes, but the question is what can a town like Mong Duong do if it does not mine its greatest, if not only, asset.
“Mong Duong isn’t a place that can rely on tourism or other industries,” said Pham Ngoc Lu, deputy chairman of the Mong Duong People’s Committee. “The coal sector’s labour force is what drives production and consumption here.”
Record rains lashed the mining town of Mong Duong in July, causing a landslide of coal ash that swept through Tuyet's community of nearly a hundred households. (Photo: Tan Qiuyi)
The record rains that lashed the mining town of Mong Duong in July are said to occur once every 40 years. (Photo: Tan Qiuyi)