Originally built in 2006–2007 to shield local communities from waves and riverbank collapse, the An Luong embankment was designed to protect more than 500 households in Thuan An and An Luong villages. For years, it served as a critical barrier between residential life and the destructive forces of the Thu Bon River. However, during the severe floods and storms of October 2025, intensified by upstream floodwaters, strong tidal surges, and coastal wave action, the embankment was extensively damaged. The destruction rapidly transformed what had been a protective structure into a fragile and deteriorating frontline.
Emergency responses at the time included the mobilization of local authorities, military personnel, police, and residents, who collectively deployed thousands of sandbags in an effort to stabilize collapsing sections. While this emergency action temporarily reduced immediate danger, it was never intended as a durable solution. Months later, exposure to saltwater, heat, and repeated wave impacts has caused most of these sandbags to rot and rupture, rendering them largely ineffective.
For local families, the consequences are deeply personal. Some homes that once stood nearly 20 meters from the embankment are now only about one meter from active erosion zones. Residents report sleepless nights whenever winds intensify, fearing sudden collapse. Fishermen, seafood traders, and market vendors whose livelihoods depend on the nearby riverfront now face both economic instability and physical danger.
The crisis also highlights a broader challenge of climate adaptation in vulnerable coastal-riverine zones. An Luong’s location near a river mouth exposes it to combined pressures from inland flooding, tidal influence, saltwater, and increasingly volatile weather patterns linked to climate change. Temporary defenses are insufficient in such conditions. Local leaders are therefore calling for the urgent construction of a new 1,564-meter reinforced hard embankment, engineered specifically for long-term resilience.
This proposed structure is not merely infrastructure—it is a lifeline. Without timely implementation, erosion could continue advancing inland, threatening homes, public infrastructure, and potentially causing loss of life during future storms. The dry season currently offers ideal construction conditions, making delays particularly concerning.
Recent field surveys by Da Nang’s agriculture, environmental, and engineering authorities suggest that technical planning is underway, but for residents, time is critical. Every month without permanent intervention increases vulnerability.
Ultimately, the An Luong embankment crisis underscores the importance of moving from reactive disaster response to proactive resilience planning. In an era of intensifying climate pressures, safeguarding communities requires infrastructure that anticipates future extremes rather than merely patching past damage.
For the people of Duy Nghia, a durable embankment is more than concrete and engineering—it represents security, stability, and the right to live without constant fear beside the river that sustains them. |