Fri. Nov 29th, 2024

A water filtration system that uses nanotechnology was introduced at a
workshop in the Mekong Delta City of Can Tho on October 22.

Experts said the technology from the Republic of Korea could be an
effective solution to water pollution in the Mekong Delta.

Duong Quoc Xuan, deputy head of the Steering Committee for the
Southwestern Region, said even though the Mekong Delta is traversed by
more than 28,000km of rivers and canals, there is still a shortage of
clean water.

Up to 75 percent of the region’s 18
million inhabitants live in rural areas, and most of them use water from
rivers on a daily basis. Meanwhile, water resources are increasingly
polluted due to agricultural and industrial production and urbanisation,
which is causing an increase in the prevalence of infectious diseases
in the community, he noted.

The official said a water filtration system that uses nanotechnology could be an appropriate solution to the problem.

Prof. Dr Hong Sik Byun, President of the Membranes Society of the RoK,
gave a presentation on the water filtration system Vikowa, which is
able to remove all impurities, heavy metals, arsenic and harmful organic
chemicals.

The product is powered by latent energy
and can therefore be used in areas that lack access to electricity, he
said, adding that first tests on Hanoi’s lakes and underwater reservoirs
met the requirements for the application of the purification
technique.-VNA

By vivian