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Enduring battle to save beaches from erosion Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
10/05/2021 10:22 GMT+7
Inclusive and sustainable solutions are in urgent need to rescue beautiful beaches along Vietnam’s central region amid the increasing frequency of landslides and sea erosion in the area.
Sea erosions have long become an obsession to people in many localities in the central region.
Stunning beaches with white smooth sand banks are distinct tourism advantages of localities in the central region. Sea-based tourism has brought significant income sources to central localities, luring in huge capital volumes from local and foreign businesses. Sea erosion and landslides, therefore, are posing a real threat to this region’s sustainable tourism development.
Enduring battle to save beaches from erosion 18:30 | 06/05/2021
Sea erosions have long become an obsession to people in many localities in the central region
Stunning beaches with white smooth sand banks are distinct tourism advantages of localities in the central region. Sea-based tourism has brought significant income sources to central localities, luring in huge capital volumes from local and foreign businesses. Sea erosion and landslides, therefore, are posing a real threat to this regionâs sustainable tourism development.
Cua Dai Beach in Quang Nam provinceâs Hoi An city, once touted as Vietnamâs most stunning beach, has been lost to the sea years ago. Nguyen Binh, a resident living in Cam An ward of Hoi An, noted that landslides had affected the beach for more than a decade. Not only that, the area suffering from erosion has been expanding.
The few tables in her shop are empty, though it s now peak tourist season. Nobody is coming here anyway. Only neighbors drop by to chat, the 53-year-old woman said. I used to be busy at this time, but now I am free all day and plays games on the phone to kill time.
Be said her business had already been shrinking because of serious coastal erosion preventing tourists from flocking to the beach. Somehow, she managed, because some high-spending European tourists loved sunbathing on the famous beach. During the peak season, which lasts from September to April, tourists to Cua Dai mainly come from Europe.
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