ADB okays $108 mln for Vietnam to improve rural infrastructure

The Asian Development Bank on Monday approved a US$108 million assistance package to upgrade rural roads and irrigation systems in Vietnam, ADB said the same day.

The Asian Development Bank on Monday approved a US$108 million assistance package to upgrade rural roads and irrigation systems in Vietnam, ADB said the same day.

The Philippines-based bank said the assistance “targets 15 mountainous provinces in northern Vietnam where more than one in four families live in poverty.”

This file photo shows a farmer with watering work in a rice field in the central province of Ninh Thuan. The Asian Development Bank approved US$108 million assistance to upgrade Vietnam’s rural roads and irrigation systems Oct 25. (Photo: Tuong Thuy)
This file photo shows a farmer with watering work in a rice field in the central province of Ninh Thuan. The Asian Development Bank approved US$108 million assistance to upgrade Vietnam’s rural roads and irrigation systems Oct 25. (Photo: Tuong Thuy)

Many rural mountainous communities lack productive rural infrastructure that results in physical isolation and limits their access to economic opportunities and services, which directly contributes to high poverty levels.

The project will support the upgrade of 600 kilometers of rural roads, and better irrigation for 12,400 hectares of farmland, ADB added.

“This project will help farming communities boost their rice yield by 25%, and make it possible for them to respond to market demands and diversify to more profitable crops,” David Salter, rural development specialist in ADB’s Southeast Asia Department, said in the Monday statement.

He added, “Travel time, effort and costs will be reduced by an average of 55% while transport reliability will be increased enabling farmers strategic marketing options.

“Improved irrigation and water management is critical for Viet Nam's food security, particularly in the face of rising food demands and the worsening effects of climate change.

“Roads are lifelines for these families,” he said.

“Good roads give rural people access to work in towns and cities to supplement and counter the cyclical incomes of farming. They also give women and the elderly better access to medical care, and make it easier for children to get to, and stay in, school.”

The ADB-supported project will also upgrade ten rural commune markets to bolster local commerce, according to the bank.

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