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People navigate a flooded street on boats during heavy rains in Hoi An, Vietnam, on Thursday. | AFP photo

Dozens of people dead, thousands evacuated and millions of dollars in damage. Vietnam is once again battling widespread flooding driven by climate change and poor infrastructure decisions, experts say.

The Southeast Asian nation’s location and topography make it naturally vulnerable to frequent typhoons and some flooding, but the situation is being made worse by the heavier rains that climate change brings and rampant urbanisation.


Vietnam is in one of the most active tropical cyclone regions on Earth and prone to heavy rains between June and September.

Ten typhoons or tropical storms usually affect Vietnam, directly or offshore, in a given year, but it has experienced 12 already in 2025.

‘Climate change is already shaping Vietnam’s exposure in several important ways,’ said Nguyen Phuong Loan, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales.

Studies suggest climate change will produce fewer but ‘possibly more intense tropical cyclones (typhoons)’ along with heavier bursts of rain because a warmer atmosphere holds more moisture.

‘That means a higher chance of flash floods, especially in densely populated urban areas,’ said Loan.

Rising sea levels are also putting pressure on coastal communities.

With 3,200 kilometres of coastline and a network of 2,300 rivers, Vietnam faces a high risk of flooding.

Much of the country has little natural ability to drain quickly after heavy flooding because of its topography, hydrological experts said.

In some cases construction and environmental degradation has made matters worse, said meteorological expert Nguyen Lan Oanh.

Upstream forest destruction for hydropower projects, cementing of drainage canals and rampant urbanisation have ‘badly contributed to the source of flooding and increased landslides’, Oanh said.

‘Humans need to change their perception in the way they treat nature for a safer world.’

This week alone, floods triggered by record rainfall in central Vietnam have killed at least 10 people and inundated more than 1,00,000 homes.

In the coastal city of Hue, up to 1.7 metres of rain fell in just 24 hours.

The flooding follows several rounds of inundations in the capital Hanoi and elsewhere, linked to storm systems or heavy rain fronts.

Natural disasters — mostly storms, floods and landslides — left 187 people dead or missing in Vietnam in the first nine months of this year.

Hundreds more were killed or left missing last year, many of them in Typhoon Yagi, the strongest storm to hit Vietnam in decades.

Yagi caused an estimated $1.6 billion in economic losses.

Vietnam ‘is making great efforts at early warning’, said Ralf Toumi, director of the Grantham Institute — Climate Change and the Environment at Imperial College London.

In recent flood incidents, the government has issued evacuation orders and assisted residents moving to higher ground.

But ‘the infrastructure also needs to be continuously improved as the country is getting richer’, Toumi added.

Dykes, sea barriers and drainage systems in major deltas on the Red River and the Mekong have been reinforced, upgraded or newly built.

And after deadly landslides and flash floods triggered by Yagi, part of an entire village in northern Lao Cai province was relocated to safer, higher ground.

But often ‘the focus is on disaster infrastructure whereas it should also be on not creating disaster risk’, said Brad Jessup, an environmental expert at the University of Melbourne.

‘Without attending to risk reduction, the needs for protection infrastructure keeps on increasing. It is a spiral.’

Climate adaptation is expensive, and wealthy countries have consistently failed to keep promises on climate funding for developing nations like Vietnam.

Rich countries pledged in 2021 to double their adaptation financing by 2025, but instead, the figure has fallen, the United Nations said this week.