Delayed projects lose licence rights
After several years of inactivity, Russia’s $1-billion Bus Centre
complex in the central province of Binh Dinh is the latest in a string of
multi-billion-dollar foreign invested projects to face the chopping block.
The Nhon Hoi Economic
Zone Management Authority last week revoked Bus Industrial Centre’s
investment certificate. The 50-hectare project, which was licensed in March
2013, was designed to produce agricultural tools, auto parts, buses, and
cars, with 70 per cent of its products intended for export. Local optimism
regarding the 3,000-5,000 jobs due to be created gave way to bitter
disappointment as construction on the project had still not begun three years
after its approval.
“The management authority
urged the investor to implement the project. However, the investor said that
they had failed to arrange the investment capital,” Nguyen Ngoc Toan, deputy
director of the Nhon Hoi Economic Zone Management Authority, told VIR. “We
always welcome and provide preferential conditions for investors but we must
revoke long-delayed projects in order to create opportunities for other
potential investors.”
Aside from the
billion-dollar bus complex, other mega projects have also come under scrutiny
recently. These include First Solar’s $1 billion photovoltaic panel
manufacturing facility in Ho Chi Minh City and the $4.5-billion Guang Lian
steel project in the central province of Quang Ngai. Both projects have
failed to make any progress over several years, and so seem likely to be axed
entirely.
The fate of the Guang
Lian steel project, which was licensed in 2006, is still up in the air
following the announcement by Taiwanese investor E-United Group that it would
withdraw from Guang Lian in July 2015. Although one of Vietnam’s leading
private steel makers Hoa Sen Group has shown an interest in carrying on
the project as E-United Group’s replacement, approval has yet to be granted.
The project received a
small ray of hope in the early days of April as the Taiwanese investor met
with the local authorities to discuss reinvesting, as it has already poured
significant capital into site clearance. However, detailed information about
the capital arrangement plan has not been disclosed as yet.
Similarly, the US-based
First Solar photovoltaic panel manufacturing facility in Ho Chi Minh City
seems unlikely to ever reach fruition.
Licensed in 2011, First
Solar’s plant was to be developed over two phases. However, eight months
after breaking ground, the investor called a halt to construction work due to
an imbalance in the global demand and supply of solar power panels. In 2014,
the company was reported to have finished all legal procedures in selling its
assets in Vietnam. Although two ownership transferral options have been
proposed, with the first being a capital transfer to a partner, and the
second being an asset transfer (sale of the facility as is), no decision has
been made yet, according to Bui Thi Nu, a senior official of the Ho Chi Minh
City Industrial and Export Processing Zones Management Authority.
Despite struggling with
its own project in Ho Chi Minh City, last year First Solar signed a
Memorandum of Understanding with Vietnam’s Thien Tan to provide solar panels
to the group’s $41.2 million/19.2 megawatt solar power plant in the central
province of Quang Ngai, the first of its kind in Vietnam. Construction
started in August 2015, and the facility is expected to be plugged into the
national grid later this year.
Between 2006 and 2015,
Vietnam licensed 26 foreign-invested projects with the registered investment
capital exceeding $1 billion each. These projects – worth nearly $76.5
billion in terms of registered capital – made up a major slice of Vietnam’s total
registered foreign direct investment sum of nearly $281.9 billion by the end
of last year.
By Thu Thuy, VIR
|
Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 4, 2016
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