All posts by Đọt Chuối Non

Me? Me? Me?... Yeah yeah yeah amigo... What can me say about me-self?... me-self...me-self... Ole ole ole... me me me... I'm a young banana shoot... My dad is Banana Pa... My mom is Banana Ma... I am happy happy happy... I run around... oops... I can't run... I sing aloud... all day long... I sing in the rain... I sing in the shine... I sing day and night... I sing all the time... I watch the butterflies and the bees... and the cranes and the geese... Aha aha aha... here we go again... this little swallow circling on my head... the little swallow on my head... is about to poop on me... Hey, little fella, don't cha know where to unload ya poopa?... But, that's alright... I can swallow my pride to befriend a swallow... Yup yup yup... swallow my pride to befriend a swallow...

Xi Jinping’s ’37-year plan’ for Taiwan reunification

Attacks on the mind and a looming crisis

nikkei – Nov. 1, 2022

The administration of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen is wary of a Chinese attack launched from the nearby provinces of Fujian and Guangdong. This September photo shows piles to prevent Chinese ships from landing on the island of Kinmen, just off the mainland.

With the Chinese Communist Party’s 20th National Congress now finished, President Xi Jinping is closer than ever to becoming a leader on a par with founding father Mao Zedong. His third term as party leader will be the final stage of the “Great China” project, an initiative fraught with contradictions. This series will examine the next five years by unpacking China’s perspective and logic.

Continue reading Xi Jinping’s ’37-year plan’ for Taiwan reunification

Công nhân trong cơn bão “cắt giảm”

A LỘC – HÀ QUÂN – TIẾN THắNG 19/11/2022 06:52 GMT+7

TTCT – Tình trạng cắt giảm lao động năm nay khiến nhiều người nhận định còn tệ hơn cả năm ngoái, khi đại dịch Covid hoành hành. Không còn hình ảnh thường thấy dịp cuối năm – thời điểm công nhân tăng ca liên tục để doanh nghiệp kịp giao hàng cho đối tác. Hàng loạt doanh nghiệp cắt giảm lao động, giảm

Công nhân trong cơn bão cắt giảm - Ảnh 1.

Nhiều nhà máy da giày đang cho công nhân làm việc cầm chừng do đơn hàng khan hiếm. Ảnh: TIẾN THẮNG

Continue reading Công nhân trong cơn bão “cắt giảm”

What’s the Harm in Talking to Russia? A Lot, Actually.

Diplomacy is neither intrinsically moral nor always strategically wise.

FP

By Raphael S. Cohen, the director of the Strategy and Doctrine Program at the Rand Corporation’s Project Air Force, and Gian Gentile, the deputy director of the Rand Corporation’s Army Research Division.

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a commission on military-technical cooperation with foreign states in 2017.
Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a commission on military-technical cooperation with foreign states in 2017.

NOVEMBER 22, 2022, 1:36 PM

Give diplomacy a chance.” This phrase gets repeated in almost every conflict, and the war in Ukraine is no exception. A chorus of commentators, experts, and former policymakers have pushed for a negotiated peace at every turn on the battlefield: after the successful defense of Kyiv, once Russia withdrew to the east, during the summer of Russia’s plodding progress in the Donbas, after Russia’s rout in Kharkiv oblast, and now, in the aftermath of Russia’s retreat from Kherson. The better the Ukrainian military has done, the louder the calls for Ukraine to negotiate have become.

And today, it’s no longer just pundits pushing for a negotiated settlement. The U.S. House of Representatives’ progressive caucus penned a letter to President Joe Biden calling for a diplomatic solution, only to retract it a short time later. Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy has promised to scrutinize military aid to Ukraine and push for an end to the war. Even Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley has reportedly pushed for Ukraine to negotiate, although he subsequently made clear that the decision should be Kyiv’s alone.

And why not negotiate? Isn’t a diplomatic solution the best—indeed, the only—option for any kind of long-term settlement between Russia and Ukraine? And if so, what could possibly be the harm in exploring those options? Quite a lot, actually: Despite the way it is commonly portrayed, diplomacy is not intrinsically and always good, nor is it cost-free. In the Ukraine conflict, the problems with a push for diplomacy are especially apparent. The likely benefits of negotiations are minimal, and the prospective costs could be significant.

First, the argument that most wars end with diplomacy and so, therefore, will the war in Ukraine is misleading at best. Some wars—such as the U.S. Civil War and World War II—were fought to the bitter end. Others—like the American Revolution, the Spanish-American War, World War I, or the First Gulf War—were won on the battlefield before the sides headed to the negotiating table. Still others—like the Korean War—ended in an armistice, but only after the sides had fought to a standstill. By contrast, attempts at a diplomatic settlement while the military situation remained fluid—as the United States tried during the Vietnam War and, more recently, in Afghanistan—have ended in disaster. Even if most wars ultimately end in diplomatic settlements, that’s not in lieu of victory.

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Pushing Ukraine to negotiate now sends a series of signals, none of them good.

At this particular moment, diplomacy cannot end the war in Ukraine, simply because Russian and Ukrainian interests do not yet overlap. The Ukrainians, understandably, want their country back. They want reparations for the damage Russia has done and accountability for Russian war crimes. Russia, by contrast, has made it clear that it still intends to bend Ukraine to its will. It has officially annexed several regions in eastern and southern Ukraine, so withdrawing would now be tantamount, for them, to ceding parts of Russia. Russia’s economy is in ruins, so it cannot pay reparations. And full accountability for Russian war crimes may lead to Russian President Vladimir Putin and other top officials getting led to the dock. As much as Western observers might wish otherwise, such contrasts offer no viable diplomatic way forward right now.

Nor is diplomacy likely to forestall future escalation. One of the more common refrains as to why the United States should give diplomacy a chance is to avert Russia making good on its threats to use nuclear weapons. But what is causing Russia to threaten nuclear use in the first place? Presumably, it is because Russia is losing on the battlefield and lacks other options. Assuming that “diplomatic solution” is not a euphemism for Ukrainian capitulation, as its proponents insist, Russia’s calculations about whether and how to escalate would not change. Russia would still be losing the war and looking for a way to reverse its fortunes.

Diplomacy can moderate human suffering, but only on the margins. Throughout the conflict, Ukraine and Russia have negotiated prisoner swaps and a deal to allow grain exports. This kind of tactical diplomacy on a narrow issue was certainly welcome news for the captured troops and those parts of the world that depend on Ukrainian food exports. But it’s not at all clear how to ramp up from these relatively small diplomatic victories. Russia, for example, won’t abandon its attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure heading into the winter as it attempts to freeze Ukraine into submission, because that’s one of the few tactics Russia has left.

At the same time, more expansive diplomacy comes at a cost. Pushing Ukraine to negotiate now sends a series of signals, none of them good: It signals to the Russians that they can simply wait out Ukraine’s Western supporters, thereby protracting the conflict; it signals to the Ukrainians—not to mention other allies and partners around the world—that the United States might put up a good fight for a while but will, in the end, abandon them; and it tells the U.S. public that its leaders are not invested in seeing this war through, which in turn could increase domestic impatience with it.

Starting negotiations prematurely carries other costs. As Biden remarked in June: “Every negotiation reflects the facts on the ground.” Biden is right. Ukraine now is in a stronger negotiating position because it fought rather than talked. The question today is whether Ukraine will ultimately regain control over Donbas and Crimea, not Kharkiv and Kherson. This would not have been the case had anyone listened to the “give diplomacy a chance” crowd back in the spring or summer.

READ MORE

Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin meet during the U.S.-Russia summit at Villa La Grange on June 16, 2021 in Geneva, Switzerland.
Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin meet during the U.S.-Russia summit at Villa La Grange on June 16, 2021 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Talking With Russia Is Tempting—and Wrong

Why it’s still too soon for negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.

ARGUMENT JAMES TRAUB

Natalia Pevnevy celebrates atop her car in Liberty Square following Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenksky's surprise visit in Kherson, Ukraine.
Natalia Pevnevy celebrates atop her car in Liberty Square following Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenksky’s surprise visit in Kherson, Ukraine.

Ukrainians Are Holding Strong as Some in West Falter

Ukrainian identity has been fundamentally changed by invasion.

ARGUMENT THOMAS SHERLOCK

There are plenty of reasons to believe that Kyiv will be in an even stronger bargaining position as time passes. The Ukrainians are coming off a string of successes—most recently retaking Kherson—so they have operational momentum. While Ukraine has suffered losses, Western military aid continues to flow in. Despite Russia’s missile strikes on civilian infrastructure, Ukrainian morale remains strong. By contrast, Russia is on the back foot. Its military inventories have been decimated, and it is struggling to acquire alternative supplies. Its mobilization effort prompted as many Russian men to flee the country as were eventually mobilized to fight in Ukraine. Moreover, as the Institute for the Study of War has assessed, “Russian mobilized servicemen have shown themselves to be inadequately trained, poorly equipped, and very reluctant to fight.”

By contrast, a negotiated settlement—even if it successfully freezes a conflict—comes with a host of moral, operational, and strategic risks. It leaves millions of Ukrainians to suffer under Russian occupation. It gives the Russian military a chance to rebuild, retrain, and restart the war at a later date. Above all, a pause gives time for the diverse international coalition supporting Ukraine to fracture, either on its own accord or because of Russian efforts to drive a wedge into the coalition.

Eventually, there will come a time for negotiations. That will be when Russia admits it has lost and wants to end the war. Or it will come when Ukraine says that the restoration of its territory isn’t worth the continued pain of the Russian bombardment. So far, neither scenario has come to pass. Indeed, the only softening of Russia’s position was Putin’s statement last month seemingly ruling out nuclear use—at least for the time being. Apart from that, the Kremlin seems intent on doubling down, even as its military continues to be slowly pushed out of Ukraine. That’s hardly an invitation to negotiate.

Might these arguments against the reflexive call for negotiations mean that war continues for months and possibly even years? Perhaps. But it’s not yet clear that there is a viable diplomatic alternative. And even if there was, it should be Ukraine’s choice whether or not to pursue it. Ukraine and its people, after all, are paying the price in blood. If the United States and its allies are sending tens of billions of dollars in military and economic aid to Ukraine, this is only a tiny fraction of what Washington has recently spent on defense and other wars. Thanks to the Ukrainians’ excellent use of this aid, the military threat from the United States’ second-most important adversary has been dealt a serious blow. The cold, if cruel, reality is that the West’s return on its investment in Ukraine seems high.

The harshness of these realities, however, does not make current calls for a negotiated settlement intrinsically moral. If diplomacy means ramming through a settlement when the battlefield circumstances dictate otherwise, it is not necessarily the morally more justifiable or strategically wiser approach. Sometimes fighting—not talking—is indeed the better option.

“To everything there is a season,” Ecclesiastes says, including “a time of war, and a time of peace.” There will come a time for diplomacy in Ukraine. Hopefully, it will come soon. But it doesn’t seem to be today.

Raphael S. Cohen is the director of the Strategy and Doctrine Program at the Rand Corporation’s Project Air Force.

Gian Gentile is the deputy director of the Rand Corporation’s Army Research Division.

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World Cup 2022: Khi người đẹp lên sóng…

NGUYỄN VĂN HINH 20/11/2022 08:54 GMT+7

TTCT Lần đầu tiên trong lịch sử World Cup nam, có ba trọng tài nữ tham gia điều hành. Điều này càng ý nghĩa khi World Cup 2022 diễn ra ở một quốc gia Hồi giáo: Qatar. Nhưng ở Việt Nam, sự hưởng ứng World Cup có vẻ đang ngược chiều, nhìn từ một chương trình của đài truyền hình quốc gia.

Sau khi có bản quyền truyền hình, đài truyền hình quốc gia rầm rộ tổ chức tuyển chọn 32 “hot girl” tham gia chương trình “Nóng cùng World Cup” với những lời rao, tít tựa xoáy vào sức nóng hình thể phụ nữ…

Continue reading World Cup 2022: Khi người đẹp lên sóng…

Vietnam arming up to serve in US chip war on China

AsiatimesSamsung, Intel, Amkor Technology and others pouring billions into Vietnam’s chip industry as China decoupling gathers pace

By PHAN LE And HAI THANH NGUYEN

NOVEMBER 16, 2022


Samsung’s plant in Thai Nguyen Province, northern Vietnam. Photo: Samsung

The CEO of Samsung Electronics met with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and announced a US$850 million investment to manufacture semiconductor components in Thai Nguyen province on August 5, 2022.

The investment will make Vietnam one of only four countries – alongside South Korea, China and the United States – that produce semiconductors for the world’s largest memory chipmaker. Vietnam’s selection over more developed locations speaks volumes about the country’s rising importance in the semiconductor value chain.

Continue reading Vietnam arming up to serve in US chip war on China

Council on Foreign Relations – Daily news brief, Nov. 21, 2022

Top of the Agenda

COP27 Ends With Landmark Deal on Loss and Damage

The final deal of this year’s UN climate conference, COP27, included two historic firsts (Bloomberg): an agreement to establish a fund to help poor countries cope with climate damages, and a call for multilateral lenders such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to implement reforms ensuring that more of their funding addresses the climate crisis. The details of the loss and damage fund were left for future talks. Meanwhile, the communiqué left out proposed text on phasing down use of all fossil fuels, mentioning only coal. Negotiators were given an unusually short period of time to review the draft text on several major aspects of the communiqué, the Financial Times reported. After some delegates criticized the lack of transparency in negotiations, UN climate chief Simon Steill said he would review the summit process before next year’s conference to make it “as effective as possible.” 
Analysis
“The loss and damage deal agreed is a positive step, but it risks becoming a ‘fund for the end of the world’ if countries don’t move faster to slash emissions,” the World Wide Fund for Nature’s Manuel Pulgar Vidal tells the New York Times. “[The loss and damage agreement] tees up a big fight for next year’s Cop28 over who pays into and who benefits from the fund. Rich countries are pushing for China to chip in and finance to be targeted at ‘vulnerable’ countries,” Climate Home News’ Megan Darby, Joe Lo, and Chloé Farand write. This Backgrounder looks at the successes and failures of global climate agreements.
Continue reading Council on Foreign Relations – Daily news brief, Nov. 21, 2022

Tăng thuế thuốc lá – Một công cụ chính sách đặc biệt đem lại lợi ích kép

TS  – Nguyễn Ngọc Anh – Nguyễn Thế Hoàng – Nguyễn Ngọc Minh

Các đề xuất tăng thuế thuốc lá của Việt Nam để giảm tiêu dùng thuốc lá thường gặp phải một số lo ngại như gây ảnh hưởng xấu đến ngành công nghiệp thuốc lá trong nước, làm tăng thuốc lá lậu và không giảm tiêu thụ thuốc lá tổng thể một cách hiệu quả. Liệu những lo ngại này có cơ sở đến đâu?

Vùng trồng thuốc lá ở Tiên Lãng, Hải Phòng. Ảnh: Báo Hải Phòng.

Mặc dù đã thực hiện một loạt các biện pháp phòng chống thuốc lá theo Công ước khung về Kiểm soát Thuốc lá (FCTC), nhưng tiêu dùng thuốc lá vẫn là một vấn đề y tế công cộng nghiêm trọng ở Việt Nam. Với hơn 15 triệu người hút thuốc, hằng năm có đến hơn 40.000 người chết vì các bệnh liên quan đến hút thuốc lá. Bên cạnh các chi phí liên quan tới các vấn đề về sức khỏe, chi tiêu cho thuốc lá thường đi kèm với chi tiêu cho bia, rượu, đồng thời tạo ra “hiệu ứng lấn át” – làm giảm chi tiêu cho giáo dục của hộ gia đình. Kết hợp với nhau, tiêu dùng thuốc lá có tác động tiêu cực tới mức sống của hộ gia đình, cũng như ảnh hưởng xấu tới sự phát triển tương lai về cả thể chất và tinh thần của trẻ em.

Continue reading Tăng thuế thuốc lá – Một công cụ chính sách đặc biệt đem lại lợi ích kép

COP27: one big breakthrough but ultimately an inadequate response to the climate crisis

Published: November 20, 2022 12.11pm GMT The Conversation

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  1. Matt McDonaldAssociate Professor of International Relations, The University of Queensland

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Activist in front of a COP27 sign holds a picture of the Earth with a face, and a thermometer in its mouth.
EPA/SEDAT SUNA EPA-EFE/SEDAT SUNA

For 30 years, developing nations have fought to establish an international fund to pay for the “loss and damage” they suffer as a result of climate change. As the COP27 climate summit in Egypt wrapped up over the weekend, they finally succeeded.

While it’s a historic moment, the agreement of loss and damage financing left many details yet to be sorted out. What’s more, many critics have lamented the overall outcome of COP27, saying it falls well short of a sufficient response to the climate crisis. As Alok Sharma, president of COP26 in Glasgow, noted:

Friends, I said in Glasgow that the pulse of 1.5 degrees was weak. Unfortunately it remains on life support.

But annual conferences aren’t the only way to pursue meaningful action on climate change. Mobilisation from activists, market forces and other sources of momentum mean hope isn’t lost.

Continue reading COP27: one big breakthrough but ultimately an inadequate response to the climate crisis

What the Biden-Xi Meeting Means for U.S.-China Relations

CFR

The meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping did not resolve major disagreements, but it could start the process of building guardrails to prevent competition from turning into conflict.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty summit in Bali, Indonesia.
U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty summit in Bali, Indonesia. Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Blog Post by David Sacks

November 15, 2022 9:17 am (EST)

On the margins of the Group of Twenty (G20) gathering in Bali, Indonesia, U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met for the first time in person as leaders of their respective nations. Their three-and-a-half-hour meeting came against the backdrop of heightened tensions over Taiwan, unprecedented U.S. export controls on advanced technologies levied against China, ramped up North Korean missile tests, and the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Continue reading What the Biden-Xi Meeting Means for U.S.-China Relations

Hệ sinh thái biển Việt Nam: Cơ hội phục hồi?

TS – Võ Kiều Bảo Uyên

Điều gì đẩy các ngư dân đến nỗi tuyệt vọng đằng sau cánh cửa nhà giam của những nước láng giềng? Và tại sao dù biết kết cục cay đắng đó, nhiều người dân vẫn liên tiếp dấn tàu vào khu vực đánh bắt cá trái phép? Và lí do gì khiến nỗ lực gỡ thẻ vàng của Việt Nam vẫn chưa thể thành công?


Đánh bắt thủy hải sản trên vùng biển đảo Phú Quốc. Ảnh: Thuyền trưởng Nguyễn Văn Thành.

Trong căn buồng giam ở Tanjung Pinang, Indonesia, ngư phủ Việt Nam tên Nguyễn Văn Tư, 64 tuổi, một mình vật lộn với những cơn đau nhức ở cẳng chân. Mùa hè hai năm trước, tàu cá ông làm việc bị bắt quả tang đang thả lưới trái phép trong vùng biển Indonesia. Theo luật pháp nước này, những ngư dân làm thuê sẽ không bị phạt tù. Tuy nhiên, Tư đã không đủ tiền mua vé máy bay về nước sau phiên tòa nên bị giữ lại suốt 20 tháng qua. 

Hàng trăm ngư dân Việt Nam giống Tư đang đợi chờ ngày về từ các nhà giam kham khổ của Indonesia nhưng có lẽ tình cảnh của Tư bi đát hơn cả. Ông bị tách ra khỏi đồng hương và bị giam riêng biệt do bị nghi mắc bệnh phong.

Thực trạng ngư dân Việt Nam xâm phạm vùng biển nước khác phổ biến đến mức, năm 2017, Việt Nam đã bị Ủy ban châu Âu (EC) rút thẻ vàng cảnh cáo hoạt động khai thác thủy sản. Theo số liệu thống kê của lực lượng Cảnh sát biển Việt Nam, hàng ngàn ngư dân trên hơn 1.000 tàu cá bị lực lượng chức năng các nước bắt giữ trong ba năm 2017-2020.  


Lượng tàu cá Việt Nam tăng gần gấp bốn lần trong 20 năm qua. Tàu cá từ biển miền Trung và vùng Đồng bằng sông Cửu Long chiếm lần lượt 50% và 25% tàu cá toàn bộ đất nước. Biểu đồ: Thibi.co

Continue reading Hệ sinh thái biển Việt Nam: Cơ hội phục hồi?

CFR – The World This Week, November 18, 2022

The World This Week will not be sent next week due to the holiday.
Explore the Biden-Xi Meeting David Sacks
U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty summit in Bali, Indonesia. Kevin Lamarque/ReutersThe meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping did not resolve major disagreements, but it could start the process of building guardrails to prevent competition from turning into conflict. Read more on Asia Unbound
Can Cooperation Make a Comeback at the G20?
Group of Twenty (G20) leaders are meeting in Bali, but divisions over trade, climate change, and the war in Ukraine threaten to overshadow the summit. What does the G20 do? Get the background
Continue reading CFR – The World This Week, November 18, 2022

CFR – The World This Week, November 18, 2022

The World This Week will not be sent next week due to the holiday.
Explore the Biden-Xi Meeting David Sacks
U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty summit in Bali, Indonesia. Kevin Lamarque/ReutersThe meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping did not resolve major disagreements, but it could start the process of building guardrails to prevent competition from turning into conflict. Read more on Asia Unbound
Can Cooperation Make a Comeback at the G20?
Group of Twenty (G20) leaders are meeting in Bali, but divisions over trade, climate change, and the war in Ukraine threaten to overshadow the summit. What does the G20 do? Get the background
Continue reading CFR – The World This Week, November 18, 2022

Sức khỏe công cộng ở Việt Nam: Những ngộ nhận cơ bản

Tiasang – Klaus Krickeberg

Ngành sức khỏe công cộng luôn có đóng góp quan trọng, nếu không muốn nói là hơn so với ngành y học lâm sàng trong việc bảo vệ sức khỏe và kéo dài tuổi thọ của cả cộng đồng. Tuy nhiên, phải sau thời kì giải phóng, Việt Nam mới bắt đầu chú ý đến ngành khoa học này. Theo đó, các khoa chuyên ngành hoặc Đại học Y đều phải có bộ môn Y tế Công cộng. Chương trình học của sinh viên Y cũng phải có nội dung về Y tế Công cộng.

Tiêm cho từng người là việc của ngành y tế lâm sàng nhưng lên kế hoạch tiêm chủng trên diện rộng là nhiệm vụ của ngành sức khỏe công cộng. Ảnh: Trương Thanh Tùng

Nhờ đó, ngành sức khỏe công cộng của Việt Nam đã có những thành tựu nhất định, nhưng sự phát triển của ngành này trong những năm qua vẫn trì trệ mà phần lớn là do bộ máy hành chính quan liêu. Continue reading Sức khỏe công cộng ở Việt Nam: Những ngộ nhận cơ bản

Year-end layoffs force frugal life on thousands of factory workers

VNE – By Le Tuyet   November 18, 2022 | 10:47 am GMT+7

“Have you found a new job?” For the last 10 days, this has invariably been the question on every worker’s lips at a residential block in HCMC’s District 12.

Located on Le Van Khuong Street, the block has over 40 rooms and the majority of tenants are workers of garment factory Sun Kyoung Vietnam, which is 100% South Korean-owned.

Early November this month, the company declared that it will cease operations because partners had suddenly canceled all orders. This meant the dismissal of around 830 employees. Ten days after it made the closure announcement, the company made its final payments to the workers.

“I received a total of VND12 million ($484.26) as October salary and financial support,” said Chau Thi Ha, a 32-year-old Tra Vinh native who worked at the factory for more than two years.

Chau Thi Ha cooks dinner, her familys one meal of the day, at her rented room in HCMCs District 12. Photo by VnExpress/Le Tuyet
Chau Thi Ha cooks dinner, her family’s one meal of the day, at a rented room in HCMC’s District 12. Photo by VnExpress/Le Tuyet

Continue reading Year-end layoffs force frugal life on thousands of factory workers

Thị trường điện lực bền vững ở Việt Nam ?

TS  – Thái Doãn Hoàng Cầu

Cơ chế mua điện trực tiếp đang được trông đợi có thể đem lại một thị trường điện bền vững cho Việt Nam?

Nhà máy LEGO bền vững nhất thế giới sắp được xây dựng tại Bình Dương. Ảnh: Lego

Tháng 3/2022 vừa qua, Tập đoàn đồ chơi LEGO (Đan Mạch) đã tuyên bố một tin vui đối với Việt Nam sau bầu không khí u ám của đại dịch COVID-19 vừa đi qua: họ sẽ khởi công xây dựng một nhà máy trị giá 1,3 tỉ USD tại Bình Dương và đây cũng là dự án có số vốn lớn nhất của nhà đầu tư Đan Mạch tại Việt Nam. Điều đặc biệt, Phó Chủ tịch LEGO Preben Elnef nói rằng đây là nhà máy bền vững nhất của tập đoàn này trên thế giới và hoàn toàn trung hòa về mặt carbon.

Nhưng mong ước đó sẽ không thể thực hiện được nếu nhà máy này không sử dụng 100% năng lượng tái tạo. Sau tuyên bố trên không lâu, đại diện LEGO đã gặp Bộ trưởng Bộ Công thương để đề xuất có cơ chế mua điện trực tiếp từ các nhà sản xuất điện năng lượng tái tạo – gọi tắt là DPPA.

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