May 30, 2026 | 04:08 GMT +7

  • Click to copy
Saturday- 16:45, 09/05/2026

WWF Viet Nam, Dak Lak partner on conservation and sustainability

(VAN) On May 7, WWF-Viet Nam and the Dak Lak Provincial People’s Committee signed a cooperation agreement aimed at strengthening biodiversity conservation and promoting sustainable development across the province.

Dak Lak is widely recognized as one of Viet Nam’s most ecologically valuable regions. It is home to unique dry dipterocarp forests and the country’s largest population of Asian elephants, primarily found in Yok Don National Park. The area also forms part of a transboundary landscape with Cambodia, offering significant potential for restoring large wildlife populations and safeguarding biodiversity.

Under the agreement, the two sides will collaborate across three key areas: conserving biodiversity and critical ecosystems; reducing plastic waste and protecting the environment; and advancing sustainable agriculture, forestry, and fisheries linked to nature conservation.

The signing ceremony of the cooperation agreement between WWF-Viet Nam and the Dak Lak Provincial People’s Committee. Photo: Dak Lak Newspaper.

The signing ceremony of the cooperation agreement between WWF-Viet Nam and the Dak Lak Provincial People’s Committee. Photo: Dak Lak Newspaper.

At the signing ceremony, Mr.Nguyen Thien Van, Vice Chairman of the Dak Lak People’s Committee, emphasized that the partnership would deepen ties between the province and WWF-Viet Nam, while enhancing coordination and mobilizing technical expertise, experience, and resources for conservation, environmental protection, and the development of sustainable agri-forestry and fisheries systems.

Mr.Vu Van Ngoc Thinh, representing WWF-Viet Nam, described the agreement as the starting point for a long-term partnership. He highlighted a strong commitment to mobilizing international resources, ensuring transparency in implementation, and working closely with local authorities—particularly in elephant conservation.

In the coming years, joint efforts will focus on maintaining and growing wild elephant populations by improving habitats and reducing human–elephant conflict. Ecosystem restoration programs will also be rolled out, including pilot initiatives to breed and reintroduce prey species, with the long-term goal of restoring larger wildlife populations.

The partnership will further expand cross-border cooperation with Mondulkiri province in Cambodia on biodiversity conservation, while promoting sustainable agricultural and aquaculture models connected to businesses and green finance.

Rangers at Yok Don National Park use SMART Mobile to collect patrol data. Photo: WWF-Viet Nam.

Rangers at Yok Don National Park use SMART Mobile to collect patrol data. Photo: WWF-Viet Nam.

On the environmental front, initiatives to reduce plastic waste will be stepped up, including pilot schemes to collect waste generated from aquaculture and production activities.

The agreement is expected to lay the groundwork for Dak Lak to become a model for balancing nature conservation with socio-economic development, helping protect one of Southeast Asia’s most important ecological landscapes.

Author: Minh Hanh

Translated by Minh Hanh

Viet Nam pioneers South-South cooperation in agriculture

Viet Nam pioneers South-South cooperation in agriculture

(VAN) This marks the first time the world has established a unified government-level coordination mechanism to strongly promote agricultural cooperation among countries in the Global South.

Wildlife conservation: [2] Revival in the heart of great forest

Wildlife conservation: [2] Revival in the heart of great forest

(VAN) Kon Ka Kinh National Park is also a place that helps revive wildlife that had once been hunted and kept in captivity.

Sun Wah, MAE developing value chain transparency solutions

Sun Wah, MAE developing value chain transparency solutions

(VAN) On May 28, Deputy Minister Vo Van Hung held a working meeting with Mr. Jonathan Choi, Chairman of Sun Wah.

Extreme heatwave triggers mass fish, shrimp deaths across ponds

Extreme heatwave triggers mass fish, shrimp deaths across ponds

(VAN) Fish are dying en masse, and shrimp ponds are turning red as extreme heat severely impacts aquaculture households in Phu Tho.

New tech in low-emission rice farming

New tech in low-emission rice farming

(VAN) Dong Thap is accelerating technology transfer to support the 1-million-hectare high-quality, low-emission rice Scheme in the Mekong Delta.

Changing farm support to end the 'bumper harvest, price crash' cycle

Changing farm support to end the 'bumper harvest, price crash' cycle

(VAN) The Viet Nam Farmers' Union is shifting its approach from input support to market support, helping farmers produce in line with market demand and increase the value of their agricultural products.

Wildlife conservation: [1] Persistent issue of illegal hunting

Wildlife conservation: [1] Persistent issue of illegal hunting

(VAN) Despite continuous crackdowns by authorities, the hunting and trading of wildlife in Gia Lai Province remain complicated.

Read more