For Hanoi – a city with a high density of vehicles, where daily fuel needs are tied to motorbikes, taxis, ride-hailing vehicles, small trucks, freight transport, and urban services – E10 is a very specific touchpoint in the green transition roadmap. Every change in fuel consumption not only relates to the energy sector but also affects the city's operational rhythm, livelihood costs, vehicle reliability, consumer rights, and social sentiment.
E10 is not a new technology globally . Vietnam has also been familiarizing itself with biofuels through E5 and previous pilot programs. The novelty lies in the scale of simultaneous deployment and the absorption capacity of the entire system: Is the supply stable? Are vehicles thoroughly vetted for compatibility? How is quality controlled at points of sale? Are consumers given timely guidance and feedback?

The overarching theme of the program is: from the story of the gas tank to the scientific basis of biofuels, operational responsibility at the point of sale, and finally, how society protects its beliefs against the rapid spread of opinions on social media.
The program poses the question: In many energy transitions, the initial risk doesn't necessarily originate from the technology itself. It can emerge at the lower levels of the system: a roadside gas station, a different car driving by, an unverified video clip, a feedback loop that hasn't been received quickly enough. In such cases, perception can spread faster than technical data, and doubts can arise before official explanations reach the public.
The program's main message: Green transformation is not just a grand national goal, but begins with very specific changes in urban life. With E10, the success of the policy lies not only in its sound principles, but also in how it is implemented: the science must be clear, the operation must be precise, information must be transparent, consumer rights must be protected, and the voices of the people must be heard before concerns spread faster than the truth.
The program featured two guest speakers: Dao Duy Anh, Deputy Director of the Department of Innovation, Green Transformation and Industrial Promotion, Ministry of Industry and Trade; and Pham Trung Tuyen, Deputy Director of VOV Traffic Channel.
Source: https://hanoimoi.vn/e10-va-lo-trinh-chuyen-doi-xanh-1159884.html







