Showing posts with label Delta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delta. Show all posts

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Delta region's largest port begins operations

HA NOI — The biggest wharf in Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta was inaugurated in southern Can Tho City yesterday, two months earlier than expected.

Terminal No 2 of Cai Cui Seaport, the principal work of the seaport construction project's second phase, is capable of handling 20,000- DWT ships and receiving nearly-30,000-DWT ships.

The project, built in just 14 months, came to fruition through the co-operation of Can Tho City People's Committee and the Viet Nam National Shipping Lines (Vinalines).

The wharf will facilitate Can Tho City's move toward becoming one of the gateways of the Mekong Delta area, a major import and export hub.

It will also help reduce the cost and time of transport and ease the pressure on the overloaded Sai Gon Seaport.

The first phase of construction for the Cai Cui Seaport, a 9-ha wharf capable of accommodating vessels with a freight capacity of 10,000 tonnes and a warehouse and container yard, began in January 2007.

Once the entire project is completed in 2012, Cai Cui will become the largest-ever seaport in the region. When fully operational, it is expected to handle 650,000 tonnes of cargo per year. — VNS

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

US$900 million committed to Mekong Delta

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung (2nd, L), Minister of Planning and Investment Vo Hong Phuc (2nd, R) and Victoria Kwakwa (R), country director of the World Bank (WB) for Vietnam, at the conference on Mekong Delta investment and development in Can Tho City on Monday - Photo: TTXVN
CAN THO – Foreign investors committed to pouring over US$900 million into the Mekong Delta while they were attending a conference on Mekong Delta investment and development in Can Tho City on Monday.

There were 10 memorandums of understanding and a letter of intent signed for 11 projects in a range of sectors such as infrastructure, energy, tourism, seafood processing, education, housing, industrial park, trade and services.  

Speaking at the conference, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said the conference provided an opportunity for investors and local authorities to learn about investment policies and find ways to cope with difficulties and improve connectivity in the region.

The conference was aimed at calling for domestic and international investors to get involved in projects in the Mekong Delta which is responsible for around 18% of Vietnam’s gross domestic product (GDP). The region also contributes 50% of the nation’s rice output, 52% of the seafood output, 70% of the fruit production, 90% of the rice export volume and 60% of the seafood export value.

However, foreign investment activity there remains lackluster in the 13-province region around 450 projects worth over US$7.7 billion licensed there so far.

Minister of Planning and Investment Vo Hong Phuc said insufficient infrastructure and manpower were major bottlenecks for investment in the delta. Although the region has Can Tho and My Thuan bridges connected to National Highway 1A, its national, interprovincial and regional road networks still have limited or no connectivity, Phuc said.

The Mekong Delta has a population of 18 million but over 85% of the work force remains untrained. Among the skilled workers, only 0.65% of them have obtained certificates, 1% vocational training diplomas and 2.57% college, university or post-graduate degrees.

Victoria Kwakwa, country director of the World Bank (WB) for Vietnam, said the WB would help the Mekong Delta attract human resources given its development potential. With WB support, the region will be able to attract more investment, she said.

In the 2006-2010 period, the delta has reached a GDP growth rate of between 10% and 12% a year. However, there remain many shortcomings in socioeconomic development in the region given slow economic restructuring, and inadequate scientific and technological applications.

The competitiveness of local businesses and products are poor and investment attraction is lower than in other parts of the country.

Ashok Sud, vice chairman of the Europe Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam, said the Mekong Delta provinces should establish specific plans for investment in key industries. He pinned high hopes on the region’s ability to make it more attractive to investors. 

The conference was co-held by the Ministry of Industry and Trade and the provincial authorities in the region, and attended by over 500 local and international delegates. This was part of the national investment promotion program.

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Friday, October 15, 2010

PM tells Delta to go inter-regional

A section of the Tra Noc Industrial Zone in the Mekong Delta City of Can Tho. A comprehensive inter-regional system among Delta provinces is required to attract investment and increase socio-economic development. — VNA/VNS Photo Hong Ky

A section of the Tra Noc Industrial Zone in the Mekong Delta City of Can Tho. A comprehensive inter-regional system among Delta provinces is required to attract investment and increase socio-economic development. — VNA/VNS Photo Hong Ky

CAN THO — Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta provinces should build inter-regional systems for attracting investment so that they could tap into their full potential, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said at a Delta investment and development conference yesterday in the city of Can Tho.

Closer links would bring practical benefits for sustainable development and improved living standards, Dung said. The Delta region played a key role in the country's socio-economic development strategy, Dung said.

The region includes 13 cities and provinces with a population of 18 million, has a coastline of 700km, and contributes 20 per cent of the country's GDP.

Its annual growth rate averages 10-12 per cent during 2006-10.

The Delta was also Viet Nam's leading agricultural and seafood-producing region, accounting for 90 per cent of total rice exports and 60 per cent of seafood exports, he said. The region's annual economic growth reached from 10 to 12 per cent in the 2006-10 period.

But the region had not yet fully exploited its potential and advantages, Dung said, with an economy that was mostly developing horizontally and remained slow to apply new technology.

The quality and competitiveness of products and enterprises were still poor and the quality of infrastructure and human resources were failing to meet the requirements for development.

Dung said the conference was an opportunity for authorities and enterprises to exchange information on investment policies and potential projects in order to encourage investment and remove obstacles to business.

He urged provincial authorities in the region to intensify their efforts to review and update plans, boost administration reforms, and create policies to lure more investment and facilitate investors in doing business effectively.

Dung affirmed the Government would encourage and create favourable conditions for domestic and foreign organisations and individuals in the Delta, as well as in the nation generally.

Minister of Planning and Investment Vo Hong Phuc said the Delta region still had a long way to go in developing transportation infrastructure, irrigation systems, and the quality of vocational training and human resources.

European Chamber of Commerce and Industry (EuroCham) vice chairman Ashok Sud said Delta cities and provinces should have specific plans to clearly define which types of industries they wanted to develop.

He said he believed in the region's capacity to attract investment and predicted that there would be a new wave of both domestic and foreign investment.

Can Tho People's Committee vice chairman Tran Tuan Anh said the conference, with the theme Connectivity and Development, was focused on measures to realise intra-regional development.

The connection would not only be transportation links but also links between the State and private sectors, between central and local leaders and policymakers, between producers and consumers, and among Delta provinces in selecting projects in order to avoid waste and promote efficiency, Anh said.

Luu Phuoc Luong, deputy head of the Southwest Steering Committee which is in charge of Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta development, noted that the Government had been investing in infrastructure and human resources in the region.

He called for more investment in the agriculture and aquaculture industries.

Infrastructure development, including ports on the river and nuclear and satellite urban centres in the region, also needed lots of investment, he said.

"There is huge demand for developing border-gate economic centres that facilitate trade with Cambodia and Thailand," he added.

Victoria Kwakwas, World Bank country director for Viet Nam, also encouraged private and foreign sectors to do more for the Delta given that the region has not benefited much from foreign direct investment in recent years even though it is actually "feeding the country and the world".

"The private sector should recognise new opportunities and adopt new approaches for the Delta," she said. "They should move the focus from volume to quality and build the Viet Nam brand on the global market."

She recommended local businesses to adopt a new development model with emphasis on moving up the value chain in manufacturing and improving supply chain efficiency.

The region should be more connected with the rest of the country and the world to enhance its competitiveness given that high shipping costs posed a major challenge to its development.

She also called for inter-regional co-ordination and multi-sectoral planning to avoid heterogeneous application of rules and regulations so that ‘changes in the central level is reflected in the provincial level'.

Hugely ambitious

In the meantime, Deputy Minister of Transport Ngo Thinh Duc described a hugely ambitious infrastructure master plan for the Delta to dispel investors' concern over its inadequate transportation infrastructure.

The plan was underway and some elements had already been completed, facilitating traffic and transportation in the region, he noted.

The road system was made up of five vertical axes and up to 10 horizontal axes, including a high-speed road from HCM City to Ca Mau Province, a no-ferry national road to the southernmost district, a coastal road that links seaside provinces, a border corridor in the west, roads in the north and south of both Tien (Front) and Hau (Rear) distributaries of the Mekong River, a high-speed road running across the southernmost provinces among others.

Two international airports would be built in Can Tho and Phu Quoc, while a high-speed railway is being considered to link HCM City and Can Tho, and a series of ports were expected to receive ships exceeding 10,000 tonnes, he said.

Within the conference, 10 memoranda of understanding were also signed between local and foreign investors with provincial leaders in sectors like energy, infrastructure, urban settlement, tourism, education and aquatic product processing with total investment of more than US$900 million.

Organised jointly by the Southwest Steering Committee, the Ministry of Planning and Investment and the Can Tho City People's Committee, the conference attracted the attention of leaders from all 13 Delta provinces, foreign diplomatic missions in the country, economic experts and almost 1,000 local and foreign business executives. — VNS

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Gov’t leader calls on investors to Mekong Delta

Gov’t leader calls on investors to Mekong Delta

The Government of Vietnam always encourages, protects and creates
favourable conditions for organisations and individuals both in and
outside the country to invest in Vietnam and the Mekong Delta
region in particular.


Prime Minister Nguyen Tan
Dung delivered this message at a conference on investment and
development in the Mekong Delta, which opened in Can Tho city on Sept. 6
with the attendance of more than 700 domestic and foreign delegates.


The leader said he hoped that the conference would
serve as an opportunity for concerned agencies and the business
community to update Vietnam ’s investment policies, projects calling
for investment, as well as obstacles hindering business and investment
activities.


PM Dung urged the regional cities and
provinces to work closely together on mechanisms and policies to attract
more investment, fully tap local potential and strengths and mobilise
all internal and external resources so as to further foster the region’s
socio-economic development and improve local people’s living
conditions.


The government has always paid special
attention to the Mekong Delta’s development through support and
facilitation policies such as a socio-economic development scheme until
2015 with a vision through 2025 and a construction plan for the region
until 2020 with a vision through 2050, he said.


The
government also approved a plan to turn the Mekong Delta into a key
economic region, under which the region is defined as a centre for rice
growing, aquaculture and aquatic product processing of the whole country
and a major hub of energy, the PM added.


The Mekong
Delta encompasses 13 cities and provinces which cover an area of 4
million hectares and boast a population of approximately 18 million,
accounting for 21 percent of the country’s total population.


The region shares a 330-km border with Cambodia and has a 700-km
coastline and territory waters of 360,000 sq.km. It contributes around
18 percent to the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) each year.


The Mekong Delta is the largest rice granary and aquaculture region in
Vietnam , making up 50 percent of the country’s rice output and 52
percent of the aquatic product volume. It accounts for up to 90 percent
of the nation’s rice export volume and 60 percent of the aquatic product
export turnover each year.


During the 2006-2010
period, the region has recorded an annual average GDP growth rate of
between 10-12 percent, of which industry and service have contributed an
increasing proportion.


It has also reaped a broad
range of achievements in terms of infrastructure, health care, education
and poverty reduction, while maintaining national defence, security and
social order.


However, the region is still facing
shortcomings and challenges, including the tardy application of
scientific and technological advances in production, the poor
competitiveness of products and businesses, the shortage of high-quality
human resources and the ineffective attraction of foreign investment./.

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Saturday, September 18, 2010

Ideas sought on Mekong Delta investment plan

CAN THO CITY — The Central Institute for Economic Management (CIEM) and the Southwestern Region Steering Committee on Thursday held a seminar to hear opinions about a draft plan on investment in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta.

The CIEM, which is under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, has drafted the plan with the aim of evaluating the potential and the obstacles in developing and attracting investment.

Despite having an advantageous location, the Delta has a slower economic growth rate than the country's other regions, according to the CIEM's research group.

Although the Delta's GDP accounted for 23 per cent of the country's GDP in 1993, the rate has fallen to 15-16 per cent.

In 1988-2009, foreign direct investment capital was only US$8 billion, accounting for only 4 per cent of the country's total FDI, according to the ministry's Foreign Investment Agency.

In 2009, the Delta attracted 31 FDI projects with total registered capital of $55.6 million.

Kien Giang, Soc Trang, An Giang and Ca Mau provinces did not attract any FDI project in 2009.

The Delta's inadequate infrastructure and low-quality labour force are the two main obstacles in attracting investment, according to the research group.

Seminar participants said the Government should help support the Delta in solving its problems and have specific policies to attract investment.

They also petitioned the Government to approve a socio-economic development plan for the Delta and the Delta's key economic zone with four priority sectors: rice, seafood and fruit cultivation and tourism development.

They also proposed that the Government invest in building a multi-purpose irrigation system for the Delta.

Without such a system, the Delta provinces would not be able to develop rice, fruit and aquaculture cultivation.

Tran Xuan Lich, CIEM deputy director, said the Ministry of Planning and Investment would ask for opinions from the Ministry of Industry and Trade, the Southwestern Region Steering Committee and the People's Committees of the Delta's 12 provinces and its one major city, Can Tho, before finalising the plan.

The plan is expected to be submitted to the Prime Minister next month. — VNS

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