Police will launch a criminal investigation if the discharged waste is classified as hazardous.
Not long after the environmental disaster caused by Taiwanese Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Company along Vietnam’s central coast, a Malaysian firm in the southern region has been caught discharging unprocessed waste into the environment.
On July 28, Dong Nai Province’s environment police, in coordination with the Department of Natural Resources and Environment, discovered Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam Co., Ltd was using one of its two underground pipelines to discharge untreated wastewater directly into the environment.
The Malaysian-owned firm that manufactures bolts and screws has denied the claim, saying the water is used to irrigate trees.
Authorities also found a large amount of waste buried on the site, news site VietnamPlus reported on August 12, quoting Vo Van Chanh, vice chairman of Dong Nai People’s Committee.
The incident is under investigation and samples of the wastewater and solid waste are being analyzed. Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam will face a criminal investigation if the waste is found to be hazardous. Otherwise, administrative fines will be imposed, the Dong Nai Newspaper reported August 12.
Locals living near the Formosa Industrial Park in Nhon Trach District where the Malaysian firm is located said underground water in the area has been severely polluted recently.
“My family has five wells but none of them can be used. Although the water looks clean, it smells like herbicide,” local woman Vo Thu Hoi told VietnamPlus.
Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam was founded in 2005 and operates as a subsidiary of Malaysia’s Chin Well Holdings Berhad. The Vietnam-based unit has investment capital of $80 million and has around 600 employees.
60 percent of Chin Well Fasterners Vietnam’s products are exported to Europe, 30 percent to the U.S, 5 percent to Japan and the rest to Southeast Asian nations, according to Chin Well’s data.
Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam is one of several foreign companies in the Formosa Industrial Park in Nhon Trach District. Taiwanese conglomerate Formosa Plastics Group established the industrial park in Dong Nai in 2001, seven years before Formosa Ha Tinh (2008). Formosa Plastics Group has four plants in the industrial park in Dong Nai.
In late June, Formosa Ha Tinh Steel admitted its $10.6 billion steel plant was responsible for the mass fish deaths that plagued the central coast. The company apologized to Vietnam and pledged to pay $500 million in compensation for the environmental disaster that it caused.
I sold all. I have work in manufacturing and waste water treatment is not cheap. Sorry to say many company do take short cut as it is cheaper alternative. It depends on the country itself. If the they can fix deal with the regulator, then it is ok. But again, heavy industry generate alot of toxic waste and it is a burden for operational cost.
& i see all sort of ways industry discharge the waste. Most famous is to open the tap during the middle of the night when there is heavy downpour. Base on the above news, they are found a large amount of waste buried on the site. Whether toxic or not, it is already against the law. And cpng is right, is this is an environmental disaster, it will cause them a big compensation and damage in reputation. So it is now depends on how vietnam goverment gonna deal with it
i hope my loss of 20% will be your gain, bunchofjokers. I also hope there is no environmental disaster. Unless you work in the company and hv insider information, i can tell you generally heavy industry dealing with steel or metal does churn out high volume toxic waste. It is depends on the regulator to keep one eyes close or both. But if vietnam is serious on this, very likely chinwell will be impacted.
I hope you are right. The last thing i would like to see is another environmental disaster. Is it not norm for you to buried the waste on site but then again, i'm not familiar with Vietnam regulation and work culture. It might be allowed there. My comment is base on the general EHS practice.
Higher operating cost for chinwel compared to its competitors in china due to a leaner rules and regulation in china. For example, monthly water treatment expenses for chinwel would cost as much as 400k. However, china is currently implementing a stricter law to protect its environment therefore, the company believes that they can keep up its competitiveness with china company in 5 years time
I still believe Chin Well has done the job on the water treatment but i still follow my trading plan to cut loss
all worry that profits may devastated by heavy reprimand fine..its human nature. Hope the company do the right way in handling waste treatment. Chinwel pls stay srong and progress!
In another news, the landlord of the are gave a press conference and said Chinwell admitted to the violation as shown below. So meaning guilty as charge??
A Malaysian company, Chin Well Fasteners (Vietnam) Co. Ltd, has been accused of releasing untreated waste water into the environment.
Vice chairman of Dong Nai Province People’s Committee, Vo Van Chanh, said at a press conference on August 12 that the company was caught releasing wastewater into the environment and burying a big volume of waste mud in its campus. “We found the violation in a sudden check at the company’s campus on July 28,” Chanh said. “The company has admitted to its violations. Relevant agencies are investigating the irregularities to make a precise assessment.”
The firm, which is based on a 17-ha area in the Formosa section of Nhon Trach 3 Industrial Park in Nhon Trach district, was licensed in 2004 to manufacture screws, nuts, bolts and other fastening products.
The press conference is about the farmosa estate management trying to distance themselves by saying there is no wrongdoing on their own territory but not on the lease land which chinwel is operating
"Allaying the concern, Chanh said there should be a clear distinction between Formosa and Chin Well as the former is the owner of the industrial estate while the latter is the source of pollution."
I believed they will do that. The more important question will b what is their client stand. As one mentioned most of their client is US and UK company. How will they react and what the impact? Also since EU rule in favour of china in the anti dumping tax, will this issue give their client a reason to switch? A similar case is ioi losing the rspo and then one of their biggest client stop purchasing from them.
ya, at this moment still pending investigation, any wild guess is not necessary as it would not help. Just be cautious and patiently waits for the finalization. Times will tell. Cheers :)
Quote "Vice chairman of Dong Nai Province People’s Committee, Vo Van Chanh, said at a press conference on August 12 that the company was caught releasing wastewater into the environment and burying a big volume of waste mud in its campus.
“We found the violation in a sudden check at the company’s campus on July 28,” Chanh said. “The company has admitted to its violations. Relevant agencies are investigating the irregularities to make a precise assessment.”"Unquote
Which part of this is wild guess? They were CAUGHT in the act.
lets wait for the investigation report and lab result on the sample taken at the factory, as far as my concern, Vietnam authority did not issued "stop work order" to the factory. so please wait and see.. it maybe just administrative penalty
Some illegal discharge of untreated water cases and penalty amount for your reference, you decide..
1) September, 05/2014 TAY NINH (VNS) — The People's Committee of the southern Tay Ninh Province has fined Hai Duong Co Ltd VND227.5 million (US$10,700) for illegal discharge of untreated wastewater into the Vam Co Dong River.
2) March, 02/2015 TAY NINH (VNS) — The People's Committee of the southern province of Tay Ninh has fined a local company VND290 million (US$13,800) for repeated violations of illegally discharging untreated waste water into the environment.
3) 16:52 | 11/05/2016 Taiwanese textile producer gets hefty fine for illegal discharge The Department of Natural Resources and Environment has issued a fine of VND637 million ($28,423) on Taiwanese textile producer MeiSheng Textile Vietnam Company (MeiSheng) in the southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau, due to its discharging untreated wastewater into a local lake, according to local newswire.
4) August 17, 2016 The Vietnam Environment Administration under the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment has made a decision to fine Pangrim Neotex Company nearly VND500 million (US$22,420) for discharging substandard wastewater into the environment. The textile company headquartered in Viet Tri city, the northern province of Phu Tho has three plants including a textile yarn, fibre and dying.
5) August 17, 2016 Viet Nam News LÂM ĐỒNG - The People's Committee of the Central Highlands' Lâm Đồng Province has decided to fine a company more than VNĐ320 million (US$14,400) for violating environment regulations. The Bảo Lộc Silk Joint Stock Company, based in the province's Bảo Lộc City, was found to have discharged untreated wastewater into the environment at the rate of 10.56cu.m per day.
then all those fines mentioned above not denominated in USD? "In late June, Formosa Ha Tinh Steel admitted its $10.6 billion steel plant was responsible for the mass fish deaths that plagued the central coast. The company apologized to Vietnam and pledged to pay $500 million in compensation for the environmental disaster that it caused."
I asked my vendor in Vietnam, they say this is just small case. We all over re-act on this news. As yongchang mentioned above, this type of environment issue will impose penalty between USD20k - USD50k only.
The Formosa case is different, as it really cause multi-million of fish dead and it cause big economy loss to that particular area.
Hi Albukhary, the fine might be small but reputation damage will be huge. If chinwell client in UK and US are public listed company, they will nd to make necessary changes as most of them have strict policy on environmental. I'm not saying china manufacturer are holier but so far there is no scandal due to china environmental law is not strong. Furthermore, after paying the fine, there will be clean up cost and capex for the waste water treatment plant. So it will impact the next Q. Unless the company con't with the current practice and cont to pay fine. Not sure how well it will go with its client.
shazali6609 my friend asked me to sell this, he just sod last 2 days..he said pls cut first as downtrending! bad report these 2 weeks, ask me cut first.. 23/08/2016 16:11
mainly because of the anti dumping tax that expired in february and volatile forex exchange rate this recent months......so below expectation result is coming.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
dnks88
75 posts
Posted by dnks88 > 2016-08-19 11:29 | Report Abuse
By VnExpress August 14, 2016 | 11:03 am GMT+7
Police will launch a criminal investigation if the discharged waste is classified as hazardous.
Not long after the environmental disaster caused by Taiwanese Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Company along Vietnam’s central coast, a Malaysian firm in the southern region has been caught discharging unprocessed waste into the environment.
On July 28, Dong Nai Province’s environment police, in coordination with the Department of Natural Resources and Environment, discovered Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam Co., Ltd was using one of its two underground pipelines to discharge untreated wastewater directly into the environment.
The Malaysian-owned firm that manufactures bolts and screws has denied the claim, saying the water is used to irrigate trees.
Authorities also found a large amount of waste buried on the site, news site VietnamPlus reported on August 12, quoting Vo Van Chanh, vice chairman of Dong Nai People’s Committee.
The incident is under investigation and samples of the wastewater and solid waste are being analyzed. Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam will face a criminal investigation if the waste is found to be hazardous. Otherwise, administrative fines will be imposed, the Dong Nai Newspaper reported August 12.
Locals living near the Formosa Industrial Park in Nhon Trach District where the Malaysian firm is located said underground water in the area has been severely polluted recently.
“My family has five wells but none of them can be used. Although the water looks clean, it smells like herbicide,” local woman Vo Thu Hoi told VietnamPlus.
Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam was founded in 2005 and operates as a subsidiary of Malaysia’s Chin Well Holdings Berhad. The Vietnam-based unit has investment capital of $80 million and has around 600 employees.
60 percent of Chin Well Fasterners Vietnam’s products are exported to Europe, 30 percent to the U.S, 5 percent to Japan and the rest to Southeast Asian nations, according to Chin Well’s data.
Chin Well Fasteners Vietnam is one of several foreign companies in the Formosa Industrial Park in Nhon Trach District. Taiwanese conglomerate Formosa Plastics Group established the industrial park in Dong Nai in 2001, seven years before Formosa Ha Tinh (2008). Formosa Plastics Group has four plants in the industrial park in Dong Nai.
In late June, Formosa Ha Tinh Steel admitted its $10.6 billion steel plant was responsible for the mass fish deaths that plagued the central coast. The company apologized to Vietnam and pledged to pay $500 million in compensation for the environmental disaster that it caused.
http://e.vnexpress.net/news/news/malaysian-owned-firm-faces-sanctions-for-polluting-in-southern-vietnam-3452277.html