Vietnam to solidify big-name FDI projects
Viet Nam expects a number of foreign direct investment (FDI) projects
worth billions of US dollars currently under negotiation to be finalised this
year and in 2016, experts have said.
After separating its LCD and OLED businesses, Samsung Display is
considering moving its LCD module (LCM) plant in South Korea to China or Viet
Nam as labour expenses in South Korea have been rising dramatically,
according to the Korean-language AJU Business Daily report.
Since the assembly of LCD modules requires manual labour, Samsung Display
wants to move production lines out of South of Korea to save costs. The
manufacturing of the cell, which is highly automated, will stay in the
country.
Local experts said that it was likely that Samsung Display would choose
Viet Nam to save costs in comparison with China.
Samsung Display opened its US$1 million plant in March in the northern
province of Bac Ninh to produce a high-resolution display to supply Samsung
smartphone manufacturers in Viet Nam and around the world.
Recently, the Bac Ninh Province's People's Committee asked the Bac Ninh
Industrial Park to negotiate and sign agreements with Samsung Display to
develop a project to expand production of Samsung in Viet Nam.
If the plan is successful, there will be billions of US dollars poured
into Viet Nam.
In addition, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has decided to also give
priority to the Victory-Nhon Hoi petrochemical and oil refinery project,
valued at $22 billion.
The project, located in Binh Dinh Province's Nhon Hoi Economic Zone, is
to be funded by the Petroleum Authority of Thailand (PTT) and its strategic
partner, the Saudi Arabian oil company Saudi Aramco.
The chairman of the Provincial People's Committee, Ho Quoc Dung, speaking
to a meeting held last week with local authorities and ministry leaders, said
he would work with PTT's representatives to complete the investment license,
scheduled to be issued in the second quarter of this year.
The Ministry of Industry and Trade is also expected to sign a
build-operate-transfer (BOT) contract and complete investment registration
procedures for the 2,640MW Van Phong Thermal Power Plant 1 in the third
quarter of this year.
When the investment certificate is issued, at least $2 billion worth of
FDI would be poured into Viet Nam.
In addition, a $5billion complex will be built by a South Korean firm on
land near the Ba Son Shipyard. South Korea's EUNSAN & OUE Group is
expected to begin construction of the project on National Day (2 September).
This is one of the key projects that would help develop the city in line
with an adopted master plan. But as the location is special in terms of
national defense, the Government and the Ministry of Defense will decide on
further procedures before the project is executed.
There are also many other projects worth billions of US dollars,
especially power projects under the BOT model, experts have said.
Dang Xuan Quang, deputy head of the Foreign Investment Department under
the Ministry of Planning and Investment, said there was a drop in FDI
investment in the first four months because many of the big projects have not
been issued investment certificates.
"Some large projects worth billions of US dollars are now under
negotiation," he said.
In a related issue, disbursement of existing FDI recorded a year-on-year
rise of 5 per cent to hit $4.2 billion in the first four months of this year,
according to the Foreign Investment Department. Tran Tuan Anh, deputy
minister of Industry and Trade, said within the first four months,
disbursement of two projects of Formosa and Samsung, to import machinery for
production, reached more than $1 billion. Also on May 19, work will start on
a Samsung project in HCM City with investment of $1.4 billion. It is
estimated that the disbursement of FDI would continue to rise in the coming
time.
Although FDI and the disbursement of FDI are showing positive signs,
experts are concerned how to fully take advantage of FDI investment for
socio-economic development.
Tran Dinh Thien, director of the Viet Nam Institute of Economics, has
raised concerns about what would happen when FDI businesses no longer find
Viet Nam an advantage for their investment.
FDI is a main resource and driver of the country's economic growth.
VNS
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Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 5, 2015
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