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The Can Tho–Ca Mau Expressway (Vietnamese: Đường cao tốc Cần Thơ–Cà Mau) is a planned expressway in Vietnam. It will connect the Mekong Delta cities Cần Thơ and Cà Mau and is the southernmost portion of the North–South Expressway East .
It is located in Đất Mũi Commune, Ngọc Hiển district, in Cà Mau, the southernmost of Vietnam's provinces. The park was established by Decision 142/2003/QĐ-TTg of the Prime Minister of Vietnam on July 14, 2003, on the basis of the natural preservation zone of Đất Mũi, a zone founded by Decision 194/CT, dated August 9, 1986.
Cà Mau (listen ⓘ) is a city in southern Vietnam. It is the capital of Cà Mau province , a province in the Mekong Delta region, in the southernmost part of Vietnam's inland territory (mainland). The city is characterised by its system of transport canals, and most goods are transported there by boats and barges.
Cape Cà Mau (Mũi Cà Mau) is a cape on the Cà Mau Peninsula in Vietnam. It is near the southernmost tip of the Vietnamese mainland. ... Cape Ca Mau National Park;
Cà Mau province. Cà Mau ⓘ Peninsula (Vietnamese: Bán Đảo Cà Mau) makes up the southern tip of Vietnam. It is in Cà Mau province, and lies between the Gulf of Thailand to the west and the South China Sea to the east. Cà Mau is a triangular stretch of land, with a maximum length of 130 miles and average height of seven feet above the ...
Since 2024, the Đầm Dơi District People's Committee under the direction of Cà Mau Province's leadership has promoted a long-term plan from 2025 to 2035 to promote the local commodity economy, thereby preparing for the upgrade of the location where has a high population density to establish at least one high-tech municipality.
Cà Mau is a province of Vietnam, named after its capital city. It is located in the Mekong Delta of southern Vietnam, and is the southernmost of Vietnam's 63 provinces. It is bordered to the north by Kiên Giang and Bạc Liêu provinces , to the west by the Gulf of Thailand , and to the south and east by the South China Sea .
Initially built by the French colonists as Moranc Airfield at Quản Long town, An Xuyên province (now Cà Mau City) with the runway of 400 m long and 16 m wide.. June 1962, Bureau of Aviation of the Republic of Vietnam rebuilt this airfield in an area of 91.61 hectares, the runway of 1050m x 30m, the apron 60m x 120 m and renamed it Quan Long Airport (Phi trường Quản Long).