The Red River is the second largest river of Vietnam after Mekong. It
descends from Yunnan, a mountainous region south of China. It is known as the
"six-head river" that enters Vietnam definitively at Lao Cai. It curves on more
than 1000km ( over 600 miles ) before dying in the somptuous bay of Hạ Long.
The Red River delta is the hub of all economic activity in the north of
Vietnam, where the majority of the region's population is concentrated. The
delta, which supports nearly half the country's rice production, is under threat
due to its strategic position and unchecked population growth that is putting an
increasing strain on resources. Food production is endangered by periodic
flooding and environmental degradation caused by intensive farming methods
designed to increase crop yields. Vietnamese planners are using satellite
imagery to model and monitor change in an effort to solve the delta's problems.
Deforestation in the hills surrounding the Red River delta is leading to
increased erosion, which in turn is causing more solid matter to be washed down
to the delta. Alluvium that would otherwise provide rich nutrients for delta
soils is blocked by levees built in the 18th century. And tectonic activity is
causing basins barely four to five metres above sea level but as far as 60
kilometres inland to become permanently water-logged.
The rice harvest during the second half of the year is vital to food
production in the delta. This period is invariably preceded by flooding that
poses a serious threat not only to agriculture but also to the economy in
general. One of the effects of new free-market policies has been to increase
crop yields through intensive farming practices, which only degrade the
environment further. Population densities exceed 1 000 inhabitants per square
kilometre in the major cities of Hanoi and Haiphong in the north of the country.