Laos flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Laos

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Laos

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Laos, a landlocked Southeast Asian nation with vast forests and the Mekong River, grapples with deforestation driven by agriculture and hydropower, losing 1.4% forest cover annually in recent years. Climate change has raised temperatures by 0.9°C since 1990 and increased flood frequency, while air and water quality data remain sparse. Government policies aim for 30% renewable energy by 2025, but enforcement lags amid rapid development.

Air Quality Index

0510
Moderate
6.5/10
Stable trend

Air quality data in Laos is limited, with no current AQI available from database; 6-month trend stable. Urban areas like Vientiane experience moderate pollution from traffic and biomass burning, but rural areas cleaner. Government monitors via MONRE but lacks comprehensive stations.

Water Quality

0510
Moderate
5.5/10

Water quality in Laos varies; Mekong River faces pollution from mining, agriculture, and hydropower dams causing sedimentation. Only 66% have access to safely managed drinking water (2022). Rural areas rely on untreated sources with bacterial contamination risks.

66% safely managed drinking water access; urban areas better treated, rural groundwater often contaminated by agriculture.

Recycling System

Recycling infrastructure in Laos is underdeveloped with no national rate data available. Informal waste picking handles plastics and metals in urban areas like Vientiane; government promotes waste separation but facilities limited. Plastic pollution significant in Mekong.

Green Spaces

Laos retains 41.5% forest cover (2020), down from 70% in 1940 due to logging and agriculture. 21 National Protected Areas cover 15.8% land, protecting biodiversity hotspots like Nam Ha and Phou Dendin. Deforestation rate 1.4%/year threatens ecosystems.

Forest Coverage: 41.5%
National Parks: 21
Nam Ha NPA (world's first ASEAN Heritage Park), Phou Khanheng NPA. Protected areas face encroachment and poaching.

Environmental Policies

Laos ratified Paris Agreement, committed to 90% renewable electricity by 2025 (mostly hydropower). Environmental Protection Law (2013) regulates pollution; National Green Growth Strategy 2019-2021 targets sustainable development. Plastic bag ban in Vientiane implemented 2020.

Key Policies:
  • Environmental Protection Law 2013
  • National Green Growth Strategy
  • Forestry Law 2019
Renewable Energy: 90% renewable electricity by 2025; currently ~90% hydropower.

Natural Disaster Risk

HIGH

Laos highly vulnerable to floods (Mekong basin), landslides, droughts, and occasional earthquakes. 2020 Typhoon Linfa caused $100M damage, 6 deaths. Annual flooding affects 20% territory.

floodslandslidesdroughtstyphoons
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures rose 0.9°C (1990-2020); extreme rain events up 15% since 2000 per MRC data. Flood frequency increased 20% last 20 years; 2024 floods displaced 200,000. Precipitation variability worsening, droughts in Bolaven Plateau more frequent (+25% since 1990).

Sustainability Initiatives

Renewable Energy

Laos pursues 90% renewable electricity by 2025 via hydropower (Nam Theun 2, Xayaburi dams). Exports 'green energy' to Thailand/Vietnam; solar projects emerging in south (10MW Saravane plant 2023).

Reforestation

National Reforestation Program targets 3M ha by 2025; Billion Tree Planting Initiative planted 5M trees 2018-2023. Focuses on degraded lands in northern provinces.

Plastic Reduction

Vientiane banned plastic bags 2020; national roadmap targets single-use plastics phase-out by 2030. Community cleanups along Mekong remove 50 tons waste annually.

Wildlife & Nature

SaolaCritically Endangered
Asian ElephantEndangered
Clouded LeopardVulnerable
Siamese CrocodileCritically Endangered