Lighting project raises energy awareness
3:09 CH,31/05/2012
Nguyen Khoa Son, directory of the Vietnam Energy Efficient Public Lighting project (VEEPL), was speaking yesterday, June 14, in Ha Noi at a meeting to announce the results of the project which was sponsored by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). He went on to emphasise that changes to the legal framework including the Law on Energy Using Efficiency and Decision 79/2009/ND – CP on urban lighting management were its biggest successes.

The five-component project with funding of over US$15.3 million, $3 million of which came from the GEF, also helped provide technical and financial support to develop energy efficient public lighting in Viet Nam and improved awareness of energy efficient consumption and production

Since 2006, 15 energy-saving public lighting models have been installed in Ha Noi, HCM City and Quy Nhon, saving 14.9 million KWh and 6,400 tonnes of carbon emissions, prompting other localities to follow suit.

Professor Dang Vu Minh, chairman of the National Assembly's Committee on Science, Technology and the Environment, said the exceptional results were due to improved public awareness.

"I see the use of energy saving devices on both new constructions and existing households. There is a real wind of change sweeping Vietnamese consumer habits," he said.

This is shown by changes on the market. Last year, more than 46.3 million energy efficient lights were produced in Viet Nam, compared to 500,000 in 2006.

UNDP representative Do Thi Huyen said that the good results did not solely lie in the amount of power saved or carbon reduced but also on the impacts to the environment, especially in the context of global climate change.

Tran Trong Hue, director of the HCM City Public Lighting Company, said that overlapping management had been a problem for the lighting sector.

Nguyen Quoc Khanh, a project expert, said that the implementation of policies and legal regulations in the lighting sector was still limited due to human and financial shortages and poor awareness of both authorities and enterprises.

"Energy consumption limits are still not compulsory for enterprises, so if people continue to buy products that consume a lot of energy, enterprises will continue to produce them," he said.

Lighting accounts for about 25 per cent of all electricity consumed in Viet Nam, and public lighting makes up nearly one-tenth of that.


VietNamNet/Viet Nam News

Bản quyền thuộc Cục Thông tin Khoa học và Công nghệ Quốc gia.
Địa chỉ trụ sở chính: 24 Lý Thường Kiệt - Quận Hoàn Kiếm - Hà Nội.
Tel: (84-04) 38249874 - 39342945 | Fax: (08-04) 38249874 | Email: techmart@vista.gov.vn