BUSINESS IN BRIEF 16/8
Dong Nai’s export increases slightly
in seven months
The southern province of Dong Nai exported 8.7 billion
USD worth of commodities in the first seven months of 2016, a year-on-year
increase of 4.35 percent.
According to Deputy Director of the provincial
Department of Industry and Trade Duong Minh Dung, the slow increase was
attributable to world falling prices of a number of products and less orders
for wood products from Japan and European markets.
The implementation of a number of free trade agreements
lowered tariffs on several products, therefore reducing their export value,
Dung added.
According to the provincial People’s Committee, while
the export turnover of the State-owned enterprises climbed12.7 percent, those
of the foreign direct investment (FDI) and private sectors increased 4.71
percent and 1.63 percent, respectively.
Some exports that enjoyed higher year-on-year growth
included coffee (24.7 percent), footwear (20.8 percent), computers and electronic
spare parts (10.18 percent), and means of transport and spare parts (7.8
percent).
Meanwhile, the province’s staples such as garment,
fibre, wood and steel products saw a low export growth.
Dong Nai’s export value is expected to grow faster in
the rest of the year when businesses step up production to fill signed
orders, helping the province fulfill its yearly export growth target of 11-12
percent.
Last year, the US was the leading market for provincial
exporters, with total goods value shipped to the market reaching over 4
billion USD, while the import turnover from the country was 1 billion
USD.
It was followed by Japan, with nearly 1.3 billion USD
in export turnover, and 700 million USD in import value.
The province’s export and import turnovers to six ASEAN
countries, including Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, the Philippines,
Singapore and Malaysia, hit 1.5 billion USD and 600 million USD,
respectively, with main commodities being textiles, footwear, computers,
electronics, wood and wooden products.
Ministry's fund lends SMEs 29
million USD
A Ministry of Planning and Investment fund will finance
small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with a total amount of 660 billion
VND (29.3 million USD) this year, an official said.
Hoang Thi Hong, Director of the SME Development Fund,
said that the funding is reserved for enterprises involved in innovative and
creative activities, and those contributing to chains of production,
processing and maintenance of agricultural, aquaculture and forestry
products.
Companies involved in support industries for
electronics, mechanics and sewage treatment, can also apply for
funding.
Firms can borrow between 10 billion VND and 25 billion
VND for 18-24 months and a preferential interest rate of 5 percent per
year.
This is reportedly the first time the SME Development
Fund lends money to enterprises since it was established in 2013 by a
Government decision, with a charter capital of 2 trillion VND.
The fund mandated the Bank for Foreign Trade of
Vietnam, Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam, and Housing
Development Bank to disburse the loans.
Official data indicates Vietnam has about 500,000
operating enterprises, of which SMEs account for 97 percent.
SMEs contribute some 46 percent to the national gross
domestic product (GDP) and 31 percent of all tax revenues, while employing 60
percent of the country's workforce of more than 52.2 million people.
Demand for new investments, business expansion and
start-ups is great. However, the majority of SMEs face difficulties in
accessing loans as they cannot afford high interest rates and fail to meet
the lending conditions of commercial banks, said Hong.
"In fact, organisations such as the World Bank,
Asian Development Bank and Japan Bank for International Cooperation have many
capital support programmes for enterprises. But it is not easy for companies
to approach these capital sources," said Dao Thi Kim Ngan, chairwoman of
the SMEs association of northern Hai Phong City.
Ngan told Dien dan Doanh nghiep (The Business Forum)
that the 660 billion VND preferential package is too small compared with
enterprises' demand for capital, suggesting business associations should
establish more funds to better assist businesses.
Industry insiders said Vietnam's SME support activities
have mainly concentrated on helping struggling firms, while programmes that
promote sustained business development remaining few.
VAMC can meet debt recovery target
this year
The Viet Nam Asset Management Company (VAMC) could meet
a target to recover VND30 trillion (US$1.339 billion) of bad debts this year,
VAMC Deputy General Director Nguyen Van Thang said.
Thang said that VAMC has so far this year recovered
VND11 trillion of bad debts, or a third of the annual target, however, the
recovery often increases sharply in the last months of the year.
According to VAMC, it has bought VND251 trillion of bad
debts from credit institutions since it was established in 2013. Of the
total, roughly VND34 trillion was recovered.
The recovery of bad debts has also increased year to
year with VND5 trillion reported in 2014, VND12 trillion in 2015 and some
VND30 trillion expected in 2016.
According to the State Bank of Viet Nam's statistics,
the bad debt ratio of Viet Nam's banking system, as of June 31, fell to 2.58
per cent from 2.78 per cent at the end of May.
The decline came mainly from debtor repayments, moving
the debts to the VAMC, risk provisions, and increasing outstanding credit.
Total bad debts handled stood at VND59.71 trillion in
the first half of this year, 14.55 per cent lower year-on-year, SBV reported,
based on final figures from the VAMC and financial institutions.
Of the total, debtors repaid VND30.97 trillion while
VND8.88 trillion were moved to the VAMC, and financial institutions used
VND7.24 trillion in risk provision to handle bad debts.
The government has for the past few months issued some
regulations related the debt trading market which is expected to boost debt
handling.
Ben Tre: Coconut growers, firms link
up
Cooperation between farmers and businesses has brought
profit and stable output for coconut growers in the southern province of Ben
Tre, which produces the most coconuts in Vietnam.
Linking businesses and farmers improved the quality and
value of products made from coconut trees and boosted local economic
development.
Lu Van Dung, a farmer in Giong Trom district’s Hung Le
commune, told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that cooperating with enterprises
offered them a stable price for their crops.
Output was not stable when they sold their products to
traders, he said.
“Farmers are forced to sell their products to traders
at low prices if they have a bumper crop,” Dung told newspaper.
Sometimes, the price of coconut was only at
14,000-15,000 VND (0.62-0.67 USD) per dozen, he said.
This did not happen after he signed a contract with Ben
Tre Import-Export Joint Stock Company three years ago.
Guaranteed, stable income was what convinced Dung to
join the project with 1ha of his field.
“They provide the fertiliser, techniques, they cover
the output. I don’t have to worry about prices plunging like with traders,”
Dung said.
He added that the company committed to buy coconuts at
50,000 VND (2.2 USD) per dozen.
They also would pay more if the market price rose above
the current floor price, Dung said.
Nguyen Van Khinh said he is happy to know he can count
on a stable year-round price after signing with the company.
He asked the company to sign a long term deal instead
of his current one year contract, Khinh said.
Besides offering farming advice and fertiliser, they
also provide farmers with plant protection drugs, he added.
“The company provides about 12 million VND per ha each
year to help farmers,” Khinh said.
The number of farmers co-operating with the company and
other local businesses has increased sharply.
More than 1,120 households have joined the company’s
project, covering an area of 897ha, with monthly output of 900,000 coconut
fruits, said Ho Thanh Liem, the company’s technical manager.
According to Ben Tre Coconut Association, the province
has more than 63,000ha of coconut trees, with a yield around 500 million
fruits per year.
However, coconut products for export are still limited,
with dry coconut fruit and desiccated coconut the main exports.
Research from the Oil and Oil Plants Research Institute
revealed that the coconut sector has faced many difficulties due to shortage
of planning.
Sometimes, coconut processing plants lacked materials
due to foreign traders buying coconuts from farmers at higher prices.
However, linking farmers and businesses should be
strengthened to bring more profits for both, experts said.-
Vingroup develops commercial complex
in Ha Giang
The real estate conglomerate Vingroup plans to build a
trade complex in Ha Giang city, the northern mountainous province of Ha
Giang, stated Secretary of the municipal Party Committee Tran Manh Loi.
Construction on the complex will begin in late
September.
The complex will include a five-storey trade centre, a
Vinmart supermarket, a Vinpro electronics store, an amusement zone, and
commercial buildings, when it is put into use in late 2017.
It will create jobs for local labourers and contribute
to the budget of the province.
Founded in Ukraine in 1993 under the name of Technocom,
Vingroup has become Vietnam’s leading private sector real estate company. It
comprises such subsidiaries as Vincom for high-end shopping centres, Vinhomes
for residential properties, Vinpearl for tourism and recreational facilities
and Vimec for hospitals.
The firm was twice named the winner of the “Best
Developer Vietnam” category at the annual South East Asia Property Awards in
2013 and 2014. Recently, together with Vinamilk, Vietcombank, FPT Corporation
and Petrovietnam Gas Joint Stock Corporation, the group made it into the
Nikkei Asian Review’s Asia 300 list, which names Asia’s most dynamic
companies.
Last year, Vingroup opened 10 shopping malls across the
country and the ambitious company plans to make nearly 50 trading centres
operational in 2016, aiming to nudge international-standard products and
services, as well as modern consumption, ever closer to Vietnamese people.
Association helps promote
Vietnam-Russia trade ties
Business and investment promotion activities arranged
by the Vietnamese Business Association in Russia (VBAR) have remarkably
contributed to boosting economic and trade links between the two countries,
heard a conference in Suzdan city, Vladimir Oblast, Russia on August 12.
In his speech, VBAR Chairman Le Truong Son highlighted
the association’s achievements as well as difficulties facing the
organisation in the last year.
Participants focused their discussions on future
orientations and ways to further effectuate activities of the association.
Russian is the leading priority partner of Vietnam not
only in politics but also in trade, Lai Ngoc Doan from the Vietnamese Embassy
in Russia said, hoping the VBAR would make greater contributions to
strengthening the Vietnam–Russia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.
The same day, a roundtable meeting was organised to
discuss possibilities to expand cooperation between Vietnamese enterprises and
Vladimir Oblast’s counterparts.
Members of the association introduced the Russian
locality’s officials to their businesses’ strengths in the fields of textiles
and garment, agriculture, industrial production and hypermarket chain.
Meanwhile, local officials briefed Vietnamese firms on
the locality’s economic potential and committed to creating the most
favourable conditions for Vietnamese companies to invest in the locality.
The VBAR is hoped to play an important role in boosting
the Vietnam-Russia economic and trade ties in the time ahead, especially in
the context that only one month, the free trade agreement between Vietnam and
the Eurasian Economic Union officially takes effect.-VNA
Japanese group seeks cooperation in
HCM City
Japan’s Forval Corporation wants to expand investment
in Vietnam, especially in Ho Chi Minh City in tourism, education and health
care.
Chairman and CEO of the group Hideo Okubo expressed the
wish at a meeting with Vice Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee Tran
Vinh Tuyen on August 12.
Okubo said the group is willing to help the city with
training for tour guides and waiting staff at restaurants and hotels, adding
that specific cooperation projects will be drafted in the coming time.
Most of Forval’s partners are small- and medium-sized
enterprises operating in the consultation field to support Japanese firms in
making investments abroad, particularly within the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN), he said.
The corporation has advised many Japanese companies to
invest in Vietnam, he said, adding that it has opened representative offices
in Hanoi and HCM City and cooperated with Vietnamese businesses in other
cities and provinces.
Tuyen hailed Forval’s desire to invest in personnel
training in tourism, education and health care, which matches the city’s
demand.
HCM City’s current tourism staff have yet to become
fully professional, hence the city hopes to partner with the Japanese group
to improve the quality of human resources in this field, he added.
The southern metropolis also hopes to have modern
technological equipment and smart management processes to take better care of
public health, he noted.
He proposed that the corporation persuades more
Japanese businesses to run investments and support HCM City to grow vigorously,
confirming that local authorities will create the optimal conditions for
entrepreneurs to do business efficiently.
Transport connectivity crucial to
southern key economic zone
The council of the southern key economic zone for the
2015-2016 tenure convened a conference in Ho Chi Minh City on August 12 to
discuss further upgrading transport and regional connectivity.
Authorities of localities in the southern key economic
zone shared the view that transport routes such as the Ho Chi Minh City – Trung
Luong, and Ho Chi Minh City – Long Thanh – Dau Giay highways, which have been
put into operation, have contributed to increasing trade and travel between
Ho Chi Minh City and regional localities.
They agreed to build new financial and budget mechanisms
in order to develop Ho Chi Minh City into a financial hub for the country and
Southeast Asia, as well as consider launching a regional investment fund to
speed up regional transport connectivity.
Chairman of the HCM City People’s Committee Nguyen
Thanh Phong, who is also Chairman of the council, said the city will host a
conference to discuss specific solutions to regional transport infrastructure
in the near future.
Deputy Transport Minister Nguyen Ngoc Dong suggested
the council propose mechanisms on rallying resources and site clearance to
strengthen transport connectivity.
In order to further uphold the zone’s role, Vice
Chairman of the Binh Duong provincial People’s Committee Mai Hung Dung called
attention to transport, environment pollution and human resources
training.
The southern key economic zone groups Ho Chi Minh City,
Dong Nai, Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Binh Duong, Binh Phuoc, Tay Ninh, Long An and Tien
Giang provinces.
Accounting for 8 percent of the country’s area and 17
percent of the nation’s population, the zone contributes 60 percent of the
State budget and absorbing more than 50 percent of the country’s total
foreign direct investment.
In 2011-2014, regional growth hit 10.2 percent, while
the country overall reached 5.7 percent.
The region’s economic structure is shifting to services
rather than agro-forestry-fisheries, industry and construction. The
investment climate has been improving.
Banking system takes action to
assist businesses
Supporting businesses is among the focal tasks of the
banking system from now to 2020, said Deputy Governor of the State Bank of
Vietnam (SBV) Dao Minh Tu.
He and bankers across Vietnam had a teleconference on
August 12 on enforcing the Government’s Resolution 19-2016/NQ-CP on tasks and
solutions to improve the business climate, and Resolution 35/NQ-CP on
supporting and developing businesses until 2020.
In late June, the central bank issued an action plan on
implementing the resolutions across the banking system, focusing on improving
credit access for enterprises and assisting their development.
Nguyen Hoang Minh, Deputy Director of the SBV’s Ho Chi
Minh City branch, said banks in the southern municipality have coordinated
with local district People’s Committees to survey companies that want to get
bank loans in order to provide help.
There haven’t been any firms complaining about
obstacles to bank loans so far, he affirmed, adding that the SBV branch and
commercial banks have considered fiduciary loans for companies that lack some
conditions of eligibility, such as collateral, but have feasible business
plans.
Minh added that though current lending interest rates
are rather reasonable, businesses still want stable mid- and long-term rates,
which have been ensured by some banks.
Khuc Van Hoa, Deputy General Director of Tien Phong
Bank (TPBank), said as most small- and medium-sized enterprises have a
collateral problem, his bank is ready to give loans, regardless of their
collateral status, provided that they have an effective business plan.
However, one hindrance is that businesses’ internal
strengths remain modest, making banks reluctant to provide loans, he said,
asking for coordination between banks and ministries to promote companies’
capacity.
Meanwhile, SBV Deputy Governor Tu told banks to
regularly overhaul their relevant policies to improve the business climate
and assist enterprises, especially in simplifying administrative
procedures.
Banks also need to offer reasonable loan interest
rates, promote their own loan verification capacity, and diversify credit
products to facilitate credit access for firms, he added.
Tilapia exports set to shoot up in
years ahead: VASEP
Tilapia fish exports this year are forecast to surge by
32 percent against 2015 to 45 million USD, according to the Vietnam
Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP).
The processing and export of the freshwater fish
species will continue thriving in the next few years, VASEP said, noting the
upward trend over the past number of years.
Vietnam shipped tilapia to 68 markets in 2015, compared
to only eight in 2005, with the US, Colombia and the EU the biggest
importers.
About 23 percent of the country’s tilapia shipments are
destined for the US at present, making Vietnam the third biggest tilapia
exporter there (following China and China’s Taiwan) with a market share of 10
percent.
In the first half of 2016, more than 2 million USD
worth of tilapia was exported to the US, about three times the figure during
the same period last year. Meanwhile, tilapia currently ranks fourth among
the 10 favourite aquatic products in the US.
In Colombia, Vietnam is the top tilapia supplier when
it has gained a 53 – 63 percent market share.
The EU, Africa and South America are also potential
destinations for Vietnam’s tilapia, VASEP said, noting total overseas
shipments of this species between January and June increased by almost
eightfold from a year earlier to nearly 14 million USD.
Although tilapia hasn’t made up a considerable
proportion in Vietnam’s aquatic exports, it boasts huge potential for both
farming and sale.
Nguyen Ba Son from the Directorate of Fisheries said by
the end of last year, tilapia had been raised on more than 25,700ha of water
surface nationwide, mostly in northern lowland and southwestern provinces,
with a total output of 187,000 tonnes.
The fish is becoming a key product of the fisheries
sector as domestic consumption and export demand for this species is large.
Meanwhile, there are only a few diseases associated with tilapia, which is
also not choosy about food and inexpensive to produce. The river and lake
systems – tilapia’s habitat – covers right across Vietnam, he said.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
targets the production of 300,000 tonnes of tilapia a year by 2020, about 50
– 60 percent of which will qualify for export. It has also issued guidance on
applying VietGAP standards in tilapia farming to ensure quality.
Vietnam is forming four concentrated tilapia breeding
regions located in Quang Ninh province in the north, Dak Lak in the Central
Highlands, and Kien Giang and Soc Trang in the Mekong Delta.
Grasping rules of origin helps
enterprises boost exports: experts
Enterprises should master the rules of origin and
non-tariff measures laid out in free trade agreements (FTAs) to make the most
use of those deals to boost exports, heard a recent conference in Bien Hoa
city, the southern province of Dong Nai.
Jointly organised by the European Trade Policy and
Investment Support Project (EU-MUTRAP) and the provincial Department of
Industry and Trade, the event aimed to support state management agencies and
enterprises in grasping the rules of origin and non-tariff measures set in
the EU-Vietnam FTA (EVFTA) and the Vietnam-the Republic of Korea FTA (VKFTA)
in order to boost Vietnamese exports to these markets.
At the conference, Trinh Thi Thu Hien, an official from
the Ministry of Industry and Trade, clarified regulations on the rules of
origin in the two agreements and guided how to apply the rules of origin code
to see whether goods are entitled to the FTAs’ preferential tariff
treatments.
Regarding non-tariff measures, including those on food
safety, animal and plant quarantine, technical barriers to trade (TBT) and
customs, Deputy Director of the Vietnam Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Notification Authority and Enquiry Point (SPS) under the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development Tran Viet Cuong said meeting TBT requirements
is a prerequisite condition for Vietnamese exporters to access the EU and RoK
markets and others.
The FTAs will create a close framework on TBT, helping
enhance transparency, stability and predictability which will bolster the
investment activities of Vietnamese enterprises and other partners, he said.
He added that enterprises should update information on
the SPS requirements of participating FTA countries, especially ASEAN
harmonisation standards, focusing on food quality and safety in accordance with
international standards and export markets.
Nguyen Viet Nga, Deputy Director of the Department of
International Cooperation under Vietnam Customs, shared that commitments on
customs procedures and cooperation will make customs management work more
effective.
However, Vietnam should continue to improve the
competency of officials in the sector as well as developing information and
risk management systems, in order to make use of the advantages and
opportunities brought about by the FTAs.
Forum promotes fruit
production-consumption link in Mekong Delta
Promoting links between production and consumption of
fruit in the Mekong Delta was the focus of discussion at a forum in Tien
Giang province on August 12.
Le Hoang Anh from My Hung Hoa hamlet, My Xuong commune,
Cao Lanh district, Dong Thap province has 1.2 hectares of mango trees,
producing 15 tonnes per year.
He expressed his concern over unstable consumption and
price, saying that these give difficulties to mango growers.
Farmer Vu Suoi from Hoa Tien commune, Vi Thanh city in
Hau Giang province has six hectares of renowned-Cau Duc pineapples, producing
between 90-120 tonnes of pineapples per year, generating some 100 million VND
(4,500 USD) in profit.
According to Suoi, not much local fruit was sold to processing
facilities. In peak harvest season, local farmers had to take their products
to markets.
He suggested more fruit processing plants be built and
connection between farmers and enterprises be enhanced to ensure stable
production and consumption.
Nguyen Huu Dat from the Vietnam Fruit and Vegetable
Association underlined the need for establishing cooperatives and applying
technologies in producing fruit to ensure sustainable development of the
sector in the context of international integration.
He also attached significance to the role of
enterprises and relevant bodies in strengthening the link between production
and consumption in order to boost the development of the fruit industry in
the Mekong Delta.
Meanwhile, Duong Canh Dan from the Hoa Loi Cooperative
in Hoa Ninh commune, Long Ho district, Vinh Long province stressed the need
for producing high-quality fruit with sufficient quantity to meet the demand
of enterprises.
He also called on support from the Government and
enterprises for cooperatives in trade promotion, brand name building and
consumption.
The Mekong Delta has over 307,000 hectares of orchards,
accounting for 37.5 percent of the national area, producing some 3.5 million
tonnes of fruit annually. The fruit trees are mostly grown in Tien Giang,
Vinh Long, Hau Giang, Soc Trang and Ben Tre.
The region has 9,400 hectares of dragonfruit, over 150
hectares of mango, nearly 50 hectares of durian and 120 hectares of longan,
meeting VietGAP or GlobalGAP standards.
In 2015, Vietnamese fruits were shipped to 60 nations
and territories in the world, earning over 1.8 billion USD, eight times
higher than that in 2005.
In the seven months of 2016, Vietnam exported nearly
1.4 billion USD worth of fruit, up 135.5 percent year-on-year.
Developers ask EVN to pay for power
grid
The HCM City Real Estate Association on August 10 asked
the local Electricity of Vietnam (EVN HCMC) branch to pay for building the
electricity grid for projects being incurred by developers.
Chairman of the association Le Hoang Chau said that
under the Electricity Law 2004 and the law supplementing and amending a
number of articles of the Electricity Law promulgated in 2012, power
companies have the responsibility of building transformer stations and
installing electricity meters for customers.
Under the Law on Real Estate Business issued in 2014,
project investors must complete infrastructure facilities before handing over
houses to their clients.
Currently, property developers had to build all
medium-voltage and low-voltage lines as well as transformer stations and
connect power meters to the lines to distribute power to every apartment. On
completion of the project, they had to pass on all the works to electricity
companies without any payment, Chau said.
He added that funds invested in the system supplying
power for housing projects often accounted for 1 percent to 2 percent of
total project investments. As a result, home buyers would have to pay more.
“After the meeting with EVN HCMC, the association will
send a document to the municipal People’s Committee and the Ministry of
Industry and Trade, asking the electricity authorities to issue a payment
mechanism applied for housing projects of which price is below 22 million VND
(982 USD) per sq.m,” Chau said.
Deputy General Director of the EVN HCMC Pham Quoc Bao
said the company acknowledged the situation and would report it to the EVN.
Bao said power prices would probably be affected if the
electricity sector had to develop a system to distribute power to every
apartment in every housing project.
He said the sector might only accept paying the cost
for projects of which profitability was ensured, meaning that people had to
live there and consume electricity.
For high-priced projects, in which nobody lived and no
power was consumed, it was hard for the sector to incur the cost.
A lawyer in HCM City said to thesaigontimes.vn that
housing developers must complete all technical facilities, including
electricity systems, within the scope of the project while power companies
must supply electricity to the hedge of the projects and install power meters
as requested by home buyers.
Vinh Phuc diversifies investment
promotion activities
The northern province of Vinh Phuc’s efforts in
attracting investors have recently been rewarded with an influx of foreign
investment.
The province has intensified investment promotion
activities in promising markets as well as countries and territories with
advanced science and technology.
At the same time, work has been stepped up in
localities to zone land for investment projects.
With infrastructure construction in industrial areas,
on-the-spot human resources development and administrative reform, Vinh Phuc
has tackled difficulties facing businesses.
The province paid special attention to luring
science-technology intensive projects in the fields of mechanics,
electronics, material construction, support industry and agriculture.
Delegations of provincial officials have travelled to
countries with developed industries, and cutting-edge science and technology
to woo investors.
These efforts paid off, as more than 220 foreign direct
investment projects with combined registered capital of over 3.4 billion USD
from 16 countries and territories have landed in the locality as of June
2016.
Of the total, Japan is running 26 projects valued at
more than 786 million USD in total.
Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Nguyen
Van Tri said Vinh Phuc aims to become a centre of car and motorbike
manufacturing.
Conference seeks measures for better
foreign aid management
The coordination and management of foreign assistance
poured into science and technology projects should be improved to ensure the
effectiveness of the aid, heard a conference held by the Vietnam Union of
Science and Technology Associations (VUSTA) on August 11.
According to VUSTA Vice President Nghiem Vu Khai, since
early this year, the union received 52 non-governmental aid projects
totalling 5 million USD, together with three official development assistance
projects worth over 6 million USD.
However, many union’s agencies are facing difficulties
in implementing the projects, including obstacles in document processing,
verification, reporting, supervision and financial balancing.
Representatives from the associations pointed out that
there remain limitations in the legal framework, policy system and
administrative procedures relating to the implementation of the projects,
together with the slow issuance of legal documents guiding the enforcement of
laws.
At the same time, there is lack of a standard guideline
on the procedure of building the programmes and projects, they said, adding
that the engagement of Vietnam ’s authorised agencies in the designing of the
programmes has been poor.
A number of regulations guiding the management of
foreign assistance are not uniform and specific, leading to low
responsibility of agencies, while the supervision and evaluation of the
projects have not received adequate attention due to lack of evaluation tools
and indications, they held.
Meanwhile, management officials at both State agencies
and international organisations are not fully aware of the important legal
regulations relating to Vietnam ’s foreign aid management.
State management agencies and sponsors need to share
information more regularly, they said.
According to Khai, recommendations from participants
will be forwarded to authorised agencies for the completion of legal
documents and policies related to the coordination, management and using of
foreign assistance.
He also highlighted the need for the science and
technology associations to become more active and enhance their capacity in
attracting, negotiating and signing foreign assistance agreements.
Hi-tech agriculture project
developed in Thua Thien-Hue
The central province of Thua Thien-Hue has licenced a
hi-tech agriculture production project in Huong Tra town and coastal areas in
Hue city with an investment of 525 billion VND (23.5 million USD).
The project, invested in by the Vineco Company, uses
Israeli technology with a production process that meets VietGAP and GlobalGAP
standards.
Covering about 213 hectares, it comprises a greenhouse
and a massive field of vegetables for domestic sale and export, a vegetable
varieties production area, centres for management, training and technology
transfer, a storage area and an irrigation system.
According to provincial People’s Committee Chairman
Nguyen Van Cao, the project aims to produce safe vegetables for both domestic
and foreign markets through the development of large-scale agriculture
production with the application of advanced technology, an area that the
province is focusing on.
It also helps attract domestic and foreign investment
and human resources in high technology, contributing to creating jobs and
increasing incomes for labourers, thus boosting local economic growth, he
said.
As committed to by the investor, the main components of
the project, including the greenhouse, infrastructure system and irrigation
system, will be completed in December this year, while the management centre
will be operational in the fourth quarter of 2017 and the centre for
technology transfer will be finished in the fourth quarter of 2018.
Rice-shrimp farming model needs zoning
Rotating rice and shrimp farming on the same fields in
the Mekong Delta has proven so economically effective and environmentally
friendly that experts have urged the creation of zoning areas for the
cutlivation model.
Under the model, which was created by farmers in the
Delta’s coastal areas, farmers grow rice in the rainy season and allow saline
water to enter fields to farm shrimp in the dry season.
The model has a yield of 300-500kg of shrimp and 4-5
tonnes of paddy per hectare each year, providing profits of VNĐ35-50 million
per ha (US$1,500–2,300) a year, according to the Directorate of Fisheries.
Rice-shrimp fields also have 15-30 per cent higher
profits than when only rice or shrimp is cultivated in areas where saline
water intrusion occurs in the dry season.
Shrimp bred in rice-shrimp fields also have less
disease outbreaks as rice cultivation helps improve the soil. In addition,
shrimp are farmed at a low density of three to five shrimp per sq.metre and
are not given animal feed.
Speaking at a recent forum held in Bạc Liêu Province,
Trần Văn Khởi, acting director of the National Agriculture Extension Centre,
said the cultivation model needed less pesticides and antibiotics, thus
ensuring cleaner produce and environmental protection.
However, irrigation systems as well as water supply and
drainage canals are not well developed and other obstacles include a lack of
quality rice seeds, shrimp fries and standard farming processes to improve
yields, he said.
Zoning for rice-shrimp farming would help reduce these
problems, he said.
Since the cultivation model uses rice fields to convert
to other crops, support policies could be created for farmers, he said.
Nguyễn Công Thành of the Minh Hải Fishery Research
Sub-institute said proper attention should be paid to shrimp fries and rice
seeds used in the model.
“Shrimp fries should be quarantined before breeding and
rice seeds should be suited to the conditions of localities. And the farming
schedules of rice and shrimp must be strictly followed. If this is done, the
model could be sustainable,” he said.
Under the model, farmers breed black-tiger shrimp,
white-legged shrimp or blue-legged prawn and cultivate several kinds of
saline-resistant rice varieties that can grow in water with salt content of
up to 0.5 per cent. All of these rice varieties have a high yield.
Nguyễn Văn Hoà, deputy head of the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development’s Plant Cultivation Development, said: “The
Plant Cultivation Development and the National Seed Centre are researching
new rice varieties resistant to saline water and suited to the rice-shrimp
farming model.”
The Cửu Long Delta Rice Research Institute has created
11 new rice varieties that can grow in saline water with a salt content of
0.2-0.6 per cent. The varieties have a yield between 5-9 tonnes per ha.
This year, the delta’s area under the shrimp-rice
farming model has increased to about 153,000ha, up 2.5 times against 2000,
according to the Directorate of Fisheries.
The coastal provinces of Kiên Giang, Cà Mau and Bạc
Liêu have the largest areas of rice-shrimp farming in the Delta.
Hoà said the area under shrimp-rice farming in the
Delta was expected to increase to 200,000ha by 2020.
“Areas that have potential for rice-shrimp farming
should be zoned. Programmes and investment projects for rice-shrimp farming
and environmental evaluation should be built,” he said.
Phan Thanh Lâm of the Institute of Aquaculture No 2
said rice-shrimp farming in the delta was an open farming model as most
farming conditions depend on the region’s weather and climate conditions.
“To reduce risk of saltwater intrusion and be
effective, proper attention should be paid to implementation, cultivation
schedules, improvement of fields, water pumping systems and community-based
management models,” he said.
The community-based management model of rice-shrimp
farming, also known as a large-scale rice-shrimp field, is implemented in
several delta provinces.
In 2014, the National Agriculture Extension Centre
chose 25 households in Kiên Giang Province’s An Biên District whose adjoining
fields with a total area of 42ha rotated shrimp and rice cultivation on the
same schedule and process, managed by the community.
Participating households were paid 60 per cent of
shrimp fry costs and 30 per cent of input materials and shrimp food costs.
The profits from shrimp and rice cultivation of the
households totalled VNĐ56.8 million ($2,500) per ha, according to the
province’s Agriculture and Fishery Extension Centre.
Last year, 23 households with 40ha of adjoining fields
in Kiên Giang’s An Minh District begun participating in this model and earned
profits of about VNĐ30 million per ha each year.
The National Agriculture Extension Centre has also
implemented this model in Cà Mau, Bạc Liêu and Sóc Trăng provinces,
attracting the participation of a total of 190 households with a combined
area of 190ha.
Youth are partners to achieve
development goals: experts
The Ministry of Home Affairs and the United Nations in
Việt Nam on August 12 held a youth event with the theme “Vietnamese Youth:
Partners in achieving the sustainable development goals” in Hà Nội.
The event was based on the visions of five young
leaders, as representatives of the 25 million young people in the country,
and face-to-face dialogues with leaders of youth-relevant ministries and the
Youth Union.
There was also a youth market where young people
displayed photos and videos that reflect their points of view on Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).
Vulnerable groups and young entrepreneurs brought
products such as handicrafts, innovative technologies and apps.
The 17 SDGs with a total of 169 targets were adopted in
2015. As many as 65 out of the 169 SDG targets explicitly or implicitly refer
to young people.
Pratibha Mehta, United Nations Resident Coordinator in
Việt Nam, said, “We can only achieve these goals if young people can actively
and meaningfully participate in development processes as drivers of change
and leaders of our future.”
“Here in Việt Nam, the SDGs must be everyone’s
business, especially young people,” she said.
On International Youth Day, the Ministry of Home
Affairs and the United Nations in Việt Nam call on all stakeholders to make
sure that young people are listened to and empowered to play a key role in
the national effort to achieve the SDGs.
Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Nguyễn Trọng Thừa said,
“We believe that young people must play a key role in working to achieve the
SDGs.”
“A strong partnership between young people and all
other stakeholders will be vital so that young people’s challenges can be
addressed, their contributions recognised, and to ensure that they are
included at all levels of decision-making,” he said.
Việt Nam is currently experiencing a golden population
period, recording the highest proportion of young people in the country’s
history. There are more than 25 million people aged between 16 and 30, more
than a quarter of the total population, according to the 2009 census.
New aid project to support women in
northwestern region
The Australian Government will provide A$2.5 million
(US$1.9 million) for three international NGOs - SNV, Oxfam and CARE
International – to support women in the northwestern provinces of Lào Cai and
Bắc Kạn.
The funds will be used for the Women’s Economic
Empowerment through Agriculture Value Chain Enhancement (WEAVE) project to be
run until 2019, a press release said today.
WEAVE will support more than 1,800 women and men in Lào
Cai and Bắc Kạn to improve their livelihoods. It will support women farmers
and co-operatives to strengthen their skills in marketing, financial
literacy, business planning, negotiation, and legal matters.
“Gender equality and women’s empowerment are top
priorities in Australia, as well as in our foreign policy, economic diplomacy
and overseas aid programme”, said Australia’s Ambassador for Women and Girls,
Natasha Stott Despoja during her first three-day visit to the country as
Ambassador for Women and Girls.
Despoja’s role is to promote Australia’s commitment to
gender equality and women’s empowerment.
During her three-day visit to Hà Nội and HCM City,
Despoja is meeting a range of organisations and individuals who are working
to tackle gender inequality and promote women’s empowerment.
Their work corresponds with the three priorities in
Australia’s Strategy for Gender Equality, which are to enhance women’s voices
in decision making and leadership, promote women’s economic empowerment, and
end violence against women, according to the press release from Australian
Embassy.
“No country in the world has fully solved gender
inequality yet,” said Despoja. “I am here to share Australia’s challenges and
lessons in tackling the issues that face women and girls, as well as to learn
about Việt Nam’s progress in striving for greater gender equality.”
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 8, 2016
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