During a major scientific workshop in Hanoi on April 14–15, approximately 50 researchers gathered to present preliminary findings from the French–Vietnamese Plume oceanographic campaign, nearly two years after the field mission was conducted aboard the French research vessel Antea. This event marked an important transition from field collection to scientific interpretation, transforming an immense volume of raw environmental data into insights that could shape policy, conservation, and long-term marine governance.
Conducted from May 27 to July 10, 2024, the Plume campaign focused on understanding how terrestrial materials transported by rivers—known as river plumes—move into and influence Vietnam’s coastal marine systems during the rainy season. This topic is especially important because river plumes carry sediments, nutrients, pollutants, organic matter, and artificial materials from inland environments into the sea, where they can profoundly affect fisheries, water quality, coastal ecosystems, microbial life, and broader oceanographic processes.
The scale of the campaign was remarkable. Covering approximately 4,800 kilometers from Hai Phong to Ho Chi Minh City, the expedition was divided into five operational segments with four major stops. Nearly 60 scientists participated, conducting measurements and sampling at 77 monitoring stations. The campaign generated over 100GB of scientific data and collected more than 2,000 kilograms of water, sediment, and plankton samples—an extraordinary research resource now being analyzed in laboratories across Vietnam and France.
This dataset is significant not only because of its volume, but because of its interdisciplinary value. By combining physical oceanography, biogeochemistry, microbiology, and environmental science, Plume provides a comprehensive framework for understanding how climate variability, land use, river discharge, and marine ecosystems interact along Vietnam’s extensive coastline.
For Vietnam, such knowledge is strategically vital. Coastal zones are increasingly exposed to sea-level rise, salinity intrusion, fisheries pressure, pollution, and climate instability. Understanding sediment transport and ecosystem responses can improve coastal planning, disaster resilience, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable marine resource management.
For France and the broader international scientific community, the collaboration demonstrates how shared expertise can accelerate environmental discovery while strengthening geopolitical scientific trust.
Equally important is the program’s role in cultivating future scientific capacity. Long-term collaboration between institutions helps train new generations of researchers, build technical infrastructure, and expand scientific diplomacy.
Ultimately, the Plume campaign underscores a crucial reality: protecting oceans requires not only conservation efforts, but also deeper understanding of the invisible systems connecting land, rivers, atmosphere, and sea.
In a century increasingly defined by environmental disruption, marine science is becoming a cornerstone of national resilience. Through the Vietnam–France partnership, Plume is helping transform scientific data into strategic environmental intelligence—laying the groundwork for smarter ocean governance, stronger coastal adaptation, and a more sustainable relationship between society and the sea. |