The Borneo Post

Taiwanese steel plant opens in Vietnam after fish deaths

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HANOI: A Taiwanese steel firm behind a toxic waste dump that killed tonnes of fish in Vietnam last year started operations on yesterday, state media in Hanoi reported.

The incident was one of the worst environmen­tal disasters in Vietnam, decimating livelihood­s along the central coast and sparking angry protests that continued yesterday.

The US$11-billion Formosa steel plant in central Ha Tinh province was still under constructi­on when it was accused of illegally dumping waste into the ocean, causing masses of fish to wash up on beaches, including rare offshore species.

The plant’s blast furnace started operating on Monday on a trial basis and will be closely monitored, according to an environmen­t official quoted in the official Vietnam News Agency ( VNA).

“If any incident occurs then we will stop operations immediatel­y,” said Hoang Duong Tung, deputy director of Vietnam’s Environmen­t Administra­tion, quoted by VNA.

The test-run results will be available in 24 hours, he added, without specifying what they are monitoring for.

The Formosa plant was subject to a series of inspection­s, and the plant addressed 52 out of 53 violations identified before being greenlit to operate.

The remaining violation was related to a wet coking system, and officials said Formosa would switch to a cleaner dry coking system by 2019, according to VNA. — AFP

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