Luke Duggleby

Photographer
    
A Damaged Delta
Public Project
A Damaged Delta
Copyright Luke Duggleby 2024
Date of Work Jul 2018 - Ongoing
Updated Aug 2018
Topics Action, Activism, Agriculture, Animals, Capitalism, Climate Change, Community, Conservation, Documentary, Editorial, Energy, Environment, Food, Landscape, Photography, Photojournalism, Portraiture, Reporting, Travel, Water, Wildlife

Vietnam’s Mekong Delta is one of the world's areas most ‘at-risk’ from the effects of climate change, which is likely to pose challenges both for its environment and its large population in years and decades to come. Local communities are seriously affected by rising sea levels and the intrusion of salinity into farmland. More than half of Vietnam’s rice production, 70% of its aquaculture and one third of its GDP are generated in the delta, which is home to 20 million people. 


This increasing salinization, made worse by an upsurge in global temperatures that causes droughts and floods in the Mekong region, along with erratic seasonal weather variations and the destruction of coastal mangrove forests pose significant and acute threats to the future of Vietnam’s rice basket.


Traditionally salt water rarely intruded more than 20km inland. But with rising sea levels, research now suggests it is encroaching on average 80km. This, coupled with the reduced flow of the Mekong River, a consequence of the construction of several large-scale dam projects, is creating serious challenges for those living off the land. Countless people in the region have already lost significant chunks of arable land or have become victims of powerful typhoons.

Whilst long-term approaches and large foreign funded implementation projects gain most of the spotlight, Vietnamese experts are leading the way in research and solutions at a local level in an attempt to mitigate and adapt to environmental changes. Dr Duong Van Ni, a professor at Can Tho University, freelance ecologist Nguyen Huu Thien and Dr Nguyen Minh Quang of the Mekong Environment Forum are just some of the people who work tirelessly to protect their homeland.


This long-term project looks to illustrate the beauty and traditions of the Delta. It also looks to highlight the serious environmental impacts facing this complex ecosystem and how it effects the people living there. 

14,430

Also by Luke Duggleby —

Project

WHEN CYBERCRIME TRAFFICKING VICTIMS BECOME SUSPECTS

Luke Duggleby
Project

EVENTS/CONFERENCES

Luke Duggleby
Project

A FRAGILE COEXISTENCE

Luke Duggleby / Thailand
Project

LIFE ON THE OTHER SIDE

Luke Duggleby / Thailand
Project

COMMERCIAL

Luke Duggleby
Project

The Maniq

Luke Duggleby / Southern Thailand
Project

ONE LAST STAND

Luke Duggleby
Project

THAI WOMEN HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS

Luke Duggleby / Thailand
Project

TEARSHEETS

Luke Duggleby
Project

PORTRAITS

Luke Duggleby
Project

NGO/DEVELOPMENT

Luke Duggleby
Project

SINGLES

Luke Duggleby
Project

THREE DECADES OF AN ANTI-DAM STRUGGLE

Luke Duggleby
Project

A Precious Land

Luke Duggleby / Loei
Project

SOUTHEAST ASIA'S DENGUE EPIDEMIC

Luke Duggleby / Bangkok
Project

For Those Who Died Trying

Luke Duggleby / Thailand
Project

The Wamon Anti-Mining Walk

Luke Duggleby / sakhon Nakhon, Thailand
Project

PROTECTING THAILANDS ROSEWOOD

Luke Duggleby
Project

Cambodia's Cardamom Forest

Luke Duggleby / Cambodia
Project

Sri Lanka's African Diaspora

Luke Duggleby / Sri Lanka
Project

A Village Under Siege

Luke Duggleby / Surat Thani
Project

Sewing a Message

Luke Duggleby
Project

Dagestan

Luke Duggleby / Dagestan
Project

SOUTH ASIA'S AFRICAN DIASPORA

Luke Duggleby / South Asia
A Damaged Delta by Luke Duggleby
Sign-up for
For more access