HANOI (AFP) – Floods submerged hundreds of hectares of dragon fruit farms in south Vietnam, residents told AFP yesterday, with many villagers forced to seek shelter on higher ground.
The flooding in Binh Thuan province was triggered by heavy rain and the discharge of water from an irrigation reservoir on Tuesday and Wednesday.
“We lost all our dragon fruit and cucumber crops this year,” Ho Van Trung, 66, told AFP.
Vietnam dragon fruit exports generated a record USD1.8 billion in 2018, but the figure has been declining in recent years.
Binh Thuan province is home to Vietnam’s biggest growing area, measuring 28,000 hectares and producing 600,000 tonnes of fruit each year.
The fiery red and green fruit with a scaly skin that gives it its name thrives in hot and dry conditions, but, as part of the cactus family, cannot stand immersion in water.
Yesterday, farmers in two villages in Binh Thuan’s Ham My commune said the floods in the area were “unprecedented”.
“My house and my gardens growing dragon fruit and cucumber are all submerged,” Trung said.
Living close by, Dao Thi Bich Thao and her husband had to evacuate their one-storey home after it flooded.
“Water came so quickly that we could only move our TV and refrigerator and then flee,” Thao said.
Around 200 households and 400 hectares of crops, mostly dragon fruit, had been flooded, a local official in Ham My
commune told state news site VNExpress.
More than 70 residents moved to higher ground as their homes were temporarily uninhabitable, the report said.
Scientists have warned that extreme weather events globally are becoming more intense and frequent due to climate change.