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Cambodia bans burning of rice straw, garbage to reduce air pollution

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PHNOM PENH, Dec. 14 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia has issued a directive to ban people living in rural areas from burning paddy straw and garbage in their fields to reduce air pollution, the Khmer Times reported on Monday.

 

Neth Pheaktra, Ministry of Environment spokesman, said according to a survey, the main sources and activities that cause an increase of the concentration of inert particles are emissions from industrial plants, vehicles using diesel and other fuels, forest fires, burning of grass fields, burning agricultural waste, forest clearing, burning of rice straw, burning of solid waste in the open and landfills, and dust from construction sites.

 

He said that during the dry season from December to April, the results of the previous air quality monitoring survey conducted in capital Phnom Penh and the provinces indicated that the air quality had deteriorated alarmingly, especially with the increase in the concentration of inert particles floating in the air (PMID and PM2.5) above the set standard, which could be high risk and impact people's health.

 

Pheaktra said to prevent air pollution in the country, the ministry is taking action with five measures, including preventing wildfires, improving road infrastructure, removing dust on roads and roadsides, educating people not to burn garbage, solid waste, grass, rice straw or other agricultural waste, and preparing preventive measures for forest fires.

 

"We expect people and the relevant authorities to participate by reducing the amount of waste they burn in rural areas or on plantations and land concessions because all this burning builds up air pollution, even the smallest particle circulates in the atmosphere and can seriously affect breathing," the newspaper quoted Pheaktra as saying.

 

"We also ask people not to burn their straw anymore, but to plough and bury this waste," he said. "Please do not burn straw, it can be buried in a compost pit to turn into fertilizer."

 

Tep Bunthoeun, a resident living in Kampong Speu province's Phnom Sruoch district, said that after harvesting rice he always used to burn the straw, but now he has stopped because he understands how the smoke affects air quality and deteriorates farmland.

 

Sdeung Chany, a resident living in Kampong Speu province's Kong Pisey district, said every morning she cleaned her house and burned some plastic garbage because she thought that burning a little amount of waste was not bad for the environment.

 

"When I saw the Ministry of Environment's directive, I regretted my actions and now I think that burning rice straw, forest fires and burning plastic waste makes air pollution," Chany said.

 

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-12/14/c_139588788.htm

ThaiVisa, c'est aussi en français

ThaiVisa, it's also in French

  • Popular Post

That's a start, and the easy part. Enforcing it is where the problem lies. Time will tell if they are serious about this or just passing another law that will only exist in the statute book. 

  • Popular Post
47 minutes ago, oompie69 said:

That's a start, and the easy part. Enforcing it is where the problem lies. Time will tell if they are serious about this or just passing another law that will only exist in the statute book. 

We are not talking Thailand here,let's see how it goes.If it does work Thailand will have to do

the same or better,you know,face and all that.

  • Popular Post

This is no small step in the right direction, it is a huge one. Well done Cambodia!

 

Come on Thailand, you can do it too with the stroke of a pen. Then get real about enforcement and penalties. Please.

6 hours ago, jvs said:

If it does work Thailand will have to do

the same or better,you know,face and all that.

Done already!

Well done Cambodia !

Lets see what the Thai reaction will be ( if any )

Let us see of the Cambodians are more compliant and respectful to their people, than the Thai growers. Though it is illegal here (technically, but of course not enforced) that does not seem to be stopping these hooligans.

 

The government has officially banned burning crops during January and February, according to the Ministry of Agriculture website.

But many farmers still resort to burning as it is cheaper than hiring workmen to cut stalks and collect leaves to prepare fields for the next planting.

“Total cost of cultivation rises about 30% to 40% for cutting fresh sugar cane (without burning) ... that makes it necessary to burn,” a sugarcane farmer in northeastern Thailand, who only gave his name as Sert, said. “I don’t feel good about it,” the farmer said when asked how he felt about contributing to the pollution.

 

Real me do something, and do not just talk. 

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