An Action Plan for Green Growth

Viet Nam has made rapid progress in attaining its socioeconomic goals. However, the quality of urban growth is uneven, with many cities suffering from pollution and loss of natural capital. Photo credit: ADB.

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Viet Nam's Vinh Yen City is a model for urban planners and policymakers seeking a cleaner, greener, and more sustainable city.

Overview

The GrEEEn City Action Plan of Vinh Yen in Vinh Phuc province, Viet Nam, addresses the city’s challenges of rapid urbanization by integrating sustainable urban development and environmental planning. By focusing on the 3Es—economy, environment and equity, the plan provides the framework for Vinh Yen to become an ecobusiness satellite city in metropolitan Ha Noi.

The Vinh Yen GrEEEn City Action Plan was prepared with technical assistance from the Asian Development Bank. This article summarizes the initiatives and enabling measures to implement the plan.

Key Initiatives

Vinh Yen is an industrial suburb that serves as a gateway to Viet Nam’s capital, Ha Noi. It has a robust economy and vibrant private sector. The city counts Dam Vac lake and nearby Tam Dao tourism area as its environmental assets.

The city, however, needs to address several issues. These include vulnerability to natural disasters, the presence of polluting industries, the disparity between the economic growth rate and lower

social growth rate, lack of financial resources, outdated urban infrastructure (wastewater, solid waste, drainage), and the absence of a public transportation system.

The GrEEEn Cities Action Plan outlines four key initiatives to achieve the following goals:

  • Promote ecobusiness in manufacturing and services.
  • Improve the urban environment, including Dam Vac lake.
  • Promote regional ecotourism.
  • Become a regional leader in education and health services.

To promote ecobusiness in manufacturing and services, the plan has adopted the following measures:

  • Implement a clean manufacturing plan that supports high-value manufacturing with a smaller environmental footprint.
  • Promote the use of local parts by foreign manufacturers.
  • Promote the development of low-polluting service industries such as tourism, education, and banking and finance.

To improve the urban environment, including Dam Vac lake:

  • Build the institutional capacity of the city government and their utility.
  • Create a sanitation credit scheme for low-income households to help them cope with the costs of constructing toilets, septic tanks or latrines, and for connecting to the piped wastewater network.

To promote regional ecotourism:

  • Preserve and enhance its environmental assets to capture a larger share of the regional ecotourism market.
  • Put better transport connections between Ha Noi, Vinh Yen city, and Tam Dao mountain.
  • Revise and improve the regulatory framework for lakeside development.
  • Use public-private partnerships for individual development projects.

To become a regional leader in education and health services:

  • Develop a university city and build new hospitals.

To successfully implement these measures, the action plan highlights the need for:

  • strong partnerships and inputs from stakeholders at all levels,
  • strong local government capacity for strategic planning and the rollout of agreed measures, and
  • a performance monitoring and evaluation framework, including a citizen’s community scorecard for rating service providers.

The plan sees the following outcomes/results:

  • Increased tourism and job opportunities, cleaner environment, and improved real property values.

Resources

ADB. 2015.  Vinh Yen GrEEEn City Action Plan. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank.

ADB. 2016. Nature-Based Solutions for Building Resilience in Towns and Cities: Case Studies from the Greater Mekong Subregion. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank.

R. Naik Singru. 2015. Regional Balanced Urbanization for Inclusive Cities Development: Urban–Rural Poverty Linkages in Secondary Cities Development in Southeast Asia. ADB Southeast Asia Working Paper Series. No 11. Manila: Asian Development Bank.

R. Naik Singru and M. Lindfield. 2016. Manual for Undertaking National Urban Assessments. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank.

S. Sandhu and K. Sameer. 2015. Greenhouse Gas Inventories for Urban Operations in Southeast Asia: Challenges and Opportunities. ADB Southeast Asia Working Paper Series. No. 12. Manila: Asian Development Bank.

S. Sandhu and R. Naik Singru. 2014. Enabling GrEEEn Cities: An Operational Framework for Integrated Urban Development in Southeast Asia. ADB Southeast Asia  Working Paper Series. No. 9. Manila: Asian Development Bank.

S. Sandhu, R. Naik Singru et. al. 2016. GrEEEn Solutions for Livable Cities. Manila: Asian Development Bank.

Sonia Chand Sandhu
Principal Evaluation Specialist, Independent Evaluation Department (IED), Asian Development Bank

Sonia Chand Sandhu, an environmental engineer and climate resilience and sustainability specialist, has over 27 years of international development experience in environmental sustainability, resilience, and integrated institutional solutions for the management of multisector infrastructure operations at ADB, the World Bank (South Asia and Africa), and in the private sector.

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Ramola Naik Singru
Principal Urban Development Specialist, Water and Urban Development Sector Office, Sectors Group, Asian Development Bank

Ramola Naik Singru supports ADB's urban sector development with a focus on integrated development for Livable Cities. She co-led the preparation of the framework for National Urban Assessments and the Inclusive Cities toolkit under ADB's Urban Operational Plan 2012-2020, and co-led ADB's GrEEEn Cities Initiative in Southeast Asia to develop GrEEEn City Action Plans. Ramola is interested in engaging with people to take ownership for shaping their cities, and exploring the interface between urban development, urban-rural linkages, and regional integration.

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