Showing posts with label million tons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label million tons. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Government hails nation’s 1st oil refinery

Though the country’s first oil refinery was completed nine years behind schedule, its cost was eventually lower than estimated and it remains a breakthrough for the oil industry, a government report to the National Assembly said.

The Dung Quat Refinery only cost VND40 trillion (US$2.05 billion at current value) when it was built this year, VND10 trillion less than estimated, said the report.

But according to a report released by the House Committee of Science, Technology and Environment, the refinery’s cost was estimated at $1.5 billion in 1997, raised more than once, and finally ended at $3.05 billion (VND51.7 trillion) in 2009.

The government attributed the difference of around $1 billion between the two reports to the fact that the committee report included revenue expenses like salaries and taxes.

Regarding the criticism that the plant’s capacity is too low at 6.5 million tons a year compared to 10-12 million tons for other refineries worldwide, the government said the project was executed at a time when there were no strategy or planning for oil refineries making it difficult to make a decision on the capacity.

The report admitted that PetroVietnam, which built the refinery, did not have a long-term vision for refining and therefore had to amend the design two times to add two more workshops. Meanwhile, official agencies had been slow in issuing legal documents on quality.

The government said PetroVietnam is considering importing crude oil of better quality to replace the oil from its offshore Bach Ho field, and expanding the refinery to increase its capacity to 8-10 million tons.

Many legislators questioned the competitiveness of the plant’s products and the economic benefits to the country.

Vietnam’s first refinery - an overview

It took 13 years for the Dung Quat Refinery to be built. Work began in 1997 and the plant was initially expected to go on stream in 2001, but it took until January 2010 for it to be actually completed.

Around 75 percent of the work was carried out by Vietnamese sub-contractors.

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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Business briefs

* Vietnam National Coal-Mineral Industries Group, known as Vinacomin, hired Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., Credit Agricole CIB and Citigroup Inc. to help advise it on a possible dollar bond sale, according to two people familiar with the matter. Vinacomin has been seeking approval from the government to sell US$500 million of bonds overseas this year.

* Overseas remittances to Ho Chi Minh City from January to September reached $3.04 billion, up 17.94 percent from the same period last year and nearing $3.15 billion for the whole of 2009, Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the central bank branch in the city, was quoted by Dau Tu (Investment) newspaper as saying. The value for the whole of 2010 is forecast to rise 20 percent, he said.

* Power prices in Vietnam will be adjusted four times a year in accordance with changes in input prices and the exchange rate starting from March 1 next year, the Vietnam Economic Times reported, citing an Industry and Trade Ministry document on implementing a market-oriented mechanism for power prices.

* Vietnam increased its rice export forecast for this year to 6.1 million tons, higher than a previous estimate of 5.9 million tons, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. Shipments from the world’s second-biggest producer may be more than 1 million tons in the fourth quarter, according to the document, which was posted on the ministry’s website.

* Vietnam National Petroleum Corp., known as Petrolimex, will buy 140,000 cubic meters of gasoline and diesel from Dung Quat Oil Refinery this month, said Nguyen Hoai Giang, general director of Binh Son Refinery & PetroChemical Co., which runs the refinery. Previously a Dung Quat official said domestic petrol distributors may not be able to use up the refinery’s inventory by the end of this year and it may face an inventory of more than 720,000 tons of products.

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Friday, January 28, 2011

Ba Ria-Vung Tau says no to steel projects

HCMC – The southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau will not license new steel projects from now on as such projects consume much electric power and water, which proves a big burden for the locality, said a leader of the province.

Ho Van Nien, vice chairman of the province, told the Daily late last week that because the province is facing a severe shortage of power and water for industrial production, so it will definitely reject new steel projects in the coming years.

As observed by the Daily, Ba Ria-Vung Tau is having the most licensed steel projects in the country with 18 projects, including 10 projects outside the national master plan for steel industry development approved by the Government. Steel projects in the province have a total capacity of some 3.7 million tons of ingots and 3.3 million tons of other steel products.

Nien said that to cut down the unwanted steel projects in the locality, the province has just required related agencies to consider revoking four steel projects that are moving at a snail’s pace. However, he did not mention the names of the four steel projects that will possibly be cancelled in the coming days.

Nien said that the axe could fall on more steel projects beside the four just mentioned, adding that the provincial government would only retain those steel projects that produce high-grade products.

“In the time to come, the province will call investors for projects that consume less power and water due to the limited supply capacity in the province,” he said.

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Monday, January 24, 2011

Vietnam coal group explains preference for exports

Vietnam coal group explains preference for exportsVincomin, a state-run coal and mineral group, said it has had to use export profits to offset the losses caused by low prices at home.

Because the government set coal prices for cement and power producers at a low level, the more coal Vinacomin sold to these two sectors, the greater their losses became, according to Vu Manh Hung, general director of the group.

According to Vinacomin, the prices of coal supplied to power plants rose in March, but domestic prices are still 60-64 percent lower than export prices.

“If the pricing problem can be solved, coal exports will be cut back sharply,” Hung said. 

Vinacomin is set to produce 25 million tons of coal this year. Due to a decline in orders, the group plans to export 18 million tons this year, down 6 million tons from 2009.

But while a majority of local coal output has been set aside for exports, many cement plants were forced to shut down due to a coal shortage.

State-run Vietnam Cement Industry Corporation, also known as Vicem, said its factories require 5,000 tons of coal every day to operate but Vinacomin can usually only meet half of that demand.

Vicem, which accounts for 38 percent of Vietnam’s cement output, also rejected an accusation by Vinacomin that local cement plants use outdated technologies that require an excessive amount of coal.

Local cement producers are using Japanese and European technologies, Vicem said, arguing that the real problem lies in a domestic coal shortage.

Vietnam will gradually cut down on coal exports as local demand  surges and supply declines, Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang said in May.

The country is expected to start importing coal in 2015 when a number of new power plants go online.

Analysts say it’s time for Vinacomin to reconsider its export policies to ensure sufficient supplies for the domestic market first.

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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Oil products pile up, no storage space

Oil products pile up, no storage spaceVietnam’s first oil refinery is facing the problem of having huge stockpiles of products that it has no place to store.

The Dung Quat oil refinery has 750,000 tons of oil and gasoline products in stock and not enough space to store them, said Vu Quang Nam, deputy chief executive of state-owned oil and gas group

PetroVietnam. He told a Monday conference in Hanoi that the plant has been running at full capacity, or 30 percent higher than the plan for this year.

According to Petrolimex, a subsidiary of PetroVietnam that has more than a 50 percent share of the domestic fuel market, the refinery was not able to project its output accurately at the beginning of this year.

Petrolimex therefore had to sign contracts to import 70 percent of the fuel it needed and only planned to buy the remaining 30 percent from Dung Quat. These import contracts could not be canceled, the company said.

Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Cam Tu said fuel traders had placed import orders early this year to ensure sufficient supply for the market. But the refinery’s output was higher than expected, leaving the ministry with a difficult logistical problem on its hands, he added.

The ministry has ordered PetroVietnam and Petrolimex to work together and balance demand with domestic production and imports.

The Dung Quat refinery, which cost US$3 billion to build, is designed to supply about one-third of the country’s fuel demand this year. The government in August approved a plan to increase its annual capacity from 6.5 to 10 million tons.

Vietnam spent $4.9 billion on petroleum product imports in the first nine months, a 4 percent rise, while earning $3.7 billion from the sale of crude oil, down 22 percent year-on-year, according to the General Statistics Office.

Nguyen Hoai Giang, general director of PetroVietnam subsidiary Binh Son Petrochemical Refinery Co., the operator of the 140,000-bpd refinery, said Dung Quat has supplied 5.5 million tons of fuel products to the market since it began commercial production in February last year.

Giang admitted that the plant was having a problem with slow sales right now. However, it will continue purchasing crude oil and maintain its production schedule, he said.

In the long term local fuel traders should build more storage facilities with a total capacity of 800,000 to one million tons, then “there will be no problem,” he said.

Vietnam plans to build two more refineries, aiming at self-sufficiency in oil products by 2015. Previously, the country had to import all of its fuel products.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Oil refinery slips up on poor market forecast

Failure to precisely forecast demand and supply has left Vietnam’s sole oil refinery with huge volumes of unsold stocks, the state-owned Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group, its operator, said.

The Dung Quat refinery has 750,000 tons of gasoline/oil and 2 million cubic meters of liquefied petroleum gas in stock since domestic demand is 10 percent lower than forecast and the plant’s output is 25 percent higher, Phung Dinh Thuc, general director of PetroVietnam – as the firm is known -- told the media Thursday.

But he did not provide the actual demand and supply figures.

The most practical solution now is to boost demand rather than reduce capacity since the country faces a trade deficit, he said.

At a meeting between PetroVietnam and the Ministry of Industry and Trade earlier this week, the company warned that if measures are not taken to boost exports and domestic consumption, the plant has to cut production due to lack of storage space.

Last month it had asked Quang Ngai Province, where the refinery is located, for permission to expand the plant by 134 hectares to increase its annual capacity from 6.54 million tons to 10 million tons.

But the problem with excess supply dates back to the construction of the plant last year.

It was much delayed and the exact date of its handover by French contractor Technip was not decided until early this year, forcing local oil distributors to sign import contracts.

Thus, while the plant supplies nine out of the 11 petroleum firms in the country but they only buy 30 percent of its output.

In the January-September period, imports of oil products were worth US$4.87 billion, an increase of 4 percent year on year.

The state-run Vietnam Petroleum Corp (Petrolimex), which has a 60 percent retail market share, also has contracts with foreign suppliers and buys only 19 percent of the plant’s output.

It recently became the third distributor to buy directly from the pant after PetroVietnam subsidiaries PV Oil and Petec.

This followed recent complaints by the company that it is illogical for PetroVietnam to require all oil firms to buy Dung Quat’s products through PV Oil instead of directly.

PV Oil charged a high intermediary fee, it also complained.

The Dung Quat refinery has a monthly capacity of 150,000 tons of gasoline, 240,000 tons of diesel oil, 23,000 tons of LPG and others, enough to meet 33 percent of current domestic demand.

It had produced around 5 million tons of products as of last month after reaching full capacity in May.

It has been unable to sell large quantities of jet fuel to local airlines due to red tape.

Last month it shipped 4,500 tons of jet fuel to BP Singapore.

The plant produces six items -- gasoline, diesel, LPG, polypropylene, jet fuel, and fuel oil.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Ministry mulls curbs on cement production

The Ministry of Construction plans to propose to the Prime Minister a suspension in the licensing of new cement production projects to limit the sector's overheating development, and unnecessary waste of energy.

Vu Quang Diem, Deputy Director of the Ministry's Building Materials Department, said in terms of the building materials production sector, the cement sector was the most energy-inefficient.

For each million tons of cement produced, the power sector had to supply 90-95 million kWh, Diem said.

The rapid growth of the building materials production industry, including the cement sector, had put pressure on infrastructure, especially the power sector, Diem said.

The most worrying problem was the number of new cement projects, many of which were inefficient and used out-of-date technology, would continue to rapidly increase if management was not tightened, he said.

The boom would lead to a waste of energy and harm the environment, he added.

The Department was developing a plan for cement sector development until 2015, with an orientation to 2025 to submit to the Government.

The ministry proposed a suspension of investment in 13 projects which had been approved in Prime Minister's Decision 108/2005/QD-TTg issued in 2005, but had not been carried out or would be harmful to the environment if continued.

As an alternative, the authority petitioned the Prime Minister to agree to the construction of nine projects which had more favorable local conditions and would have a significantly beneficial affect on the development of the region where they were located.

The ministry also asked for stricter punishment on projects that failed to meet schedules.

The head of the ministry's Department of Science, Technology and Environment, Nguyen Trung Hoa, said that it was difficult to compel enterprises to spend hundreds of millions of US dollars to renew technology.

Therefore it was necessary to offer preferential lending policies, so that companies would find it easier to access loans to upgrade energy-saving technology, he said, adding that a raft of complicated administrative procedures was one of obstacles that made companies hesitate when considering upgrading their technology.

The Government should strictly implement the regulation that forced cement factories to re-use exhaust fume heat discharged to generate power, as the temperature of the exhaust fumes could reach up to 370 degrees Celsius, Hoa said.

If factories could take advantage of this energy source, they could save 30 per cent of the electricity they consumed, he added.

Although the policy had been outlined in Decision 108, many enterprises had not been interested in it, Hoa said.

Diem suggested that the Government only license new projects which included the construction of a power generator using exhaust fumes.

According to the ministry, by the end of 2009, total design capacity of all cement factories nationwide was 57.4 million tons per year, which could fully satisfy domestic consumption demand. However, this year, total capacity had added an additional 11.7 million tons to output.

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Rubber export seen at US$1.5 billion

HCMC – The nation expects to beat this year’s rubber export target of US$1.5 billion this year given the rising rubber prices on the world market, according to the Vietnam Rubber Association (VRA).

Vietnam in the first nine months of 2010 obtained US$1.42 billion in rubber export revenue.

VRA said that rubber supplies from large exporters were shrinking due to unfavorable weather while rubber demands of China and India remained high. As a result, rubber prices on the global market rocketed to US$3,270 per ton in September, up 250% against the 2009 average figure.

Meanwhile, the Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries predicts the rubber output worldwide at around 9.5 million tons this year, increasing by 6.3% against 2009. However, the output will decrease from 2011 as many countries will replant rubber trees and natural rubber prices will stay high then.

China, India and Malaysia are leading rubber importers, accounting for 47% of the total global rubber consumption.

In 2009, Vietnam had the rubber growing area of 640,000 hectares, exported around 680,000 tons worth over US$1.2 billion to 70 markets.

Under the Government’s scheme, Vietnam will grow 800,000 hectares of rubber by 2020, reach the latex output of 1.2 million tons and obtain export value of US$2 billion.

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Global steel production may plateau in 5 years

TOKYO - Worldwide steel production may plateau over the next five years as a result of environmental pressures and smaller demand increases, one of the world’s top steelmakers said in a report Monday.

JFE Steel of Japan told the Financial Times that annual output would rise as high as 1.6 billion tons by the middle of the decade and then stay roughly constant for 5-10 years.

The flattening of production would result from shortages of key resources as well as the likelihood of only relatively small rises in demand, JFE chief executive Eiji Hayashida told the newspaper.

"In this environment, the pressures will be on steel companies to move to more advanced and valuable forms of steel to suit the needs of new industries, rather than add to production volumes," Hayashida said.

The biggest hindrance to future output rises, according to the JFE chief, would be growing constraints on water and energy supplies amid deepening worries about climate change.

Many steelmakers were also concerned about their ability to pass on to customers the large recent increases in iron ore prices.

This year JFE expects to make 30 million tons of steel, with the figure likely to rise to 33 million tons in 2011 following plant expansions, the Financial Times said.

The World Steel Association trade group opened its annual conference in Tokyo on Monday.

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Monday, December 6, 2010

Business briefs

* Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has ratified the amended Vietnam-US Air Transport agreement signed four months ago, which will help airlines of the two countries expand operations, especially cargo flights.

* Trade between Vietnam and Myanmar in the first eight months of this year surged 58 percent from a year earlier to US$73 million, of which Vietnam’s exports totaled $23 million, up 67 percent, Myanmar customs data show.

* Mekong Aviation Joint-Stock Co., a Vietnamese private air carrier that has partnered with Skywest Inc., will start flights from October 9, offering eight routes to popular tourist destinations in the country. Air Mekong, as it is also known, will increase the number to ten routes from November, the airline said on Wednesday.

* The government will lend Vietnam Oil & Gas Group US$300 million to pay debt to BNP Paribas SA, online newswire VnEconomy reported, citing a finance ministry circular. The company, known as PetroVietnam, borrowed the money from the French bank in January 2007 to build Dung Quat, Vietnam’s first oil refinery.

* Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group, known as Vinashin, has disbursed about VND400 billion to help its units maintain and boost operations, said Nguyen Quoc Anh, acting chief executive officer. The money is being used to pay salaries and social insurance for employees. The cash comes from selling assets during restructuring and loans, Anh said.

* Vietnam plans to spend VND57.4 trillion (US$2.9 billion) over the next decade to develop the seafood sector, the government said on Tuesday. By 2020, the country expects seafood export turnover to reach as high as $9 billion a year and total seafood output to reach between 6.5 million tons to 7 million tons.

* The Vietnam Steel Association expects the volume of steel used for construction in September to fall below 400,000 tons, from 483,000 tons in August, the Vietnam Economic Times reported, citing Nguyen Tien Nghi, vice chairman of the association. Companies have cut steel prices by between VND200,000 and VND400,000 per ton.

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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Business briefs

Five local telecom companies have been allowed by the Ministry of Information and Telecommunications to test the 4G wireless standard in Vietnam. The companies, including state-owned VNPT and military run Viettel, have been given one year to test the technology before they can apply for the license to provide the service, news website VnExpress reported on Tuesday. 4G is the latest generation wireless technology that allows ultra-broadband Internet access and multimedia services.

State-run Coal and Mineral Industry Group has found an additional 50 million tons of copper ore at the Sin Quyen Mine in the northern province of Lao Cai, news website VietNamNet reported on Wednesday. The group said Sin Quyen is the largest copper mine in Southeast Asia with total reserves of 100 million tons. It plans to raise the annual output of its ore screening plant to three million tons from the current 1.2 million. (TN, BLOOMBERG)

Electricity of Vietnam has signed an agreement with Germany’s Kreditanstalt fuer Wiederaufbau to get a 120 million-euro (US$152 million) loan, Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper reported. The utility, known as EVN, plans to use the nine-year loan, which has a low interest rate, to upgrade the grid nationwide.

Vietnam’s Atomic Energy Institute signed an agreement with NWT Uranium Corp. of Canada to assess the country’s uranium potential. Vietnam is preparing to develop a nuclear power industry. The agreement between NWT and the Vietnamese institute calls for the former to analyze uranium ore in the country, including assessing the economic and technical feasibility of any reserves found, NWT said in a stock exchange statement released on Tuesday.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Imbalance in steel industry

Imbalance in steel industryAt first glance, the figures do not make sense.

Vietnam has a surplus production of about three tons of steel every year, and yet, every year, it also imports four million tons of the alloy.

The mystery is easily solved, but the problem is not.

The surplus production is of construction steel and imports are of steel billets needed for industrial production.

“The rampant development of construction steel mills has created a surplus. Their combined capacity is some eight million tons per annum, far exceeding the demand of five million tons,” Dinh Huy Tam, general secretary of the Vietnam Steel Association, told Thanh Nien Weekly.

Meanwhile, investment in turning out steel for industrial sectors like ship building and mechanical production is still limited, so Vietnam has to import most of the products. Each year, the country imports some 4 million tons of hot-rolled steel to serve these sectors.

According to a recent report by the Ministry of Industry and Trade, the country has 74 steel projects with a combined investment of nearly US$22.2 billion in 30 cities and provinces.

However, none of these are plants that can turn out steel for industrial sectors. “Construction of some projects has been delayed,” Tam said.

Investors are not keen on producing steel billets because of the large investments and high technological requirements involved, said Le Manh Hoan, vice director of steel producer Dinh Vu.

The investment capital for a plant producing this kind of steel needs at least $500-600 million, much higher than the $100 million or so needed for a construction steel factory.

The investment exceeds a local firm’s capacity, so they need to cooperate with other firms to get involved in the business, said an industry insider. However, such cooperation has not been looked into seriously.

Rising imports

Tam said it was only after 2000 that some firms began producing steel billets, but their output only meets 60 percent of the local demand.

The mills produce some three million tons of steel billets each year, much lower than their designed capacity of 4.5 million tons. Some small-scale mills lack the ability to run at maximum capacity, while others are learning still about the technology that they have just begun applying, Tam said.

Firms often import steel scrap to produce steel billet instead of getting the raw material from mines, said Tam. As of now, the Thai Nguyen Steel Mill is the sole producer of billet from mines, with an output of some 250,000 tons each year.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Trade ministry: Rice still ample for export this year

HCMC - Strong foreign demand has pushed up reference prices of export-standard rice by US$50 per ton, but the trade ministry confirmed there would be no rice shortage for export this year.

Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Thanh Bien, who is in charge of managing rice exports, told the Daily after a review meeting on Tuesday on exports in the last four months that there is still one million tons of rice in stock. Furthermore, the commercial rice volume will increase in the upcoming harvest, he said.

“In the coming harvest, the country expects to have an additional 3.5 million tons of rice, including 1.5 million tons of commercial rice. We will weigh the situation to decide the amount for export till the end of this year,” Bien said.

However, Bien declined to comment on some predictions that the rice export volume this year could jump to a record high of seven million tons despite the ample inventory. In June, the Vietnam Food Association (VFA) suggested to raise the export target by half a million tons to 6.5 million tons of rice.

Pham Van Bay, vice chair of the association, said the total export in July and August has increased considerably from the same period last year. He estimated that export in September will be steady at between 700,000 and 800,000 tons.

The total rice export in the January-August period amounted to 4.8 million tons valued at more than US$ 2 billion.

Currently, rice exporters are increasing purchases from farmers owing to strong foreign demand.

In August, VFA raised the reference price three times by US$50 per ton. For the 5%-broken rice, the guiding price is at US$450, while that for 25%-broken rice is US$410 per ton. However, the number of rice exporters signing contracts at these prices is insignificant.

“The guiding price is applicable to both contracts under government-to-government agreements for major markets such as the Philippines, Iraq, and Cuba, as well as to commercial contracts,” Bay added.

Currently, all food traders are asked to observe the reference prices determined by VFA from time to time when signing contracts with foreign rice buyers.

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Cement surplus

Cement surplusVietnam is up to its ears in cement.

Amid a startling surplus of the product, government agencies are working quickly to figure out ways to offload cement at home and abroad.

Prospects are not looking good.

Vietnam’s 20-year industry development plan called for 53 cement factories to come into operation between 2005 and 2010.

Vietnam met its official goals, and then some. Some plants were built or developed outside the scope of the plan.

According to the Ministry of Construction, Vietnam now houses 105 cement plants with a combined capacity of 61 million tons.

This year, the plants are scheduled to produce 55 million tons; output is expected to exceed demand by some five million tons, Chairman of the Vietnam Cement Association Nguyen Van Thien said.

One hard flood

In 2009, Vietnam was featured in the list of the top ten cement producers in the world. The list includes China with an annual output of 1.37 billion tons, India 160 million tons, the US 113 million tons, and Japan 68 million tons.

The cement surplus may represent more than 10 percent of the total output in the next several years, said Le Van Toi, head of the Construction Material Department under the Ministry of Construction.

Thien said that some local governments continue to license new cement projects even though this surplus was forewarned three to four years ago.

The chairman attributes the recent rush on cement plant development to an abundance of small-time investors who purchased low-quality start-up equipment. Thien said these investors were after short-term profits.

He also cited poor local management as a contributing factor to the predicament. “While some cement plant projects were delayed, localities worry about a coming shortage, so they licensed others. When all the projects came into operation at the same time, we were left with a surplus.”

Exporters dilemma

The Construction Ministry has recently asked three cement producers – Nghi Son in Thanh Hoa Province, Chinfon in Hai Phong City, and Phuc Son in Hai Duong Province — to export 100,000-150,000 tons in the second half of this year.

The firms will have to unload 50 percent of their output in 2011, and 100 percent in 2012.

Construction Deputy Minister Nguyen Tran Nam said the three joint ventures have committed to export 30-40 percent of their annual output. However, their primary market remains at home.

“Exportation is a solution,” Thien said. “But, it is difficult to implement, and it is also not a decisive solution.”

Exporting cement can be a losing deal and one not easily made.

Vietnam planned to export some one million tons in 2010. However, the Vietnam Cement Corporation has only managed to ship around 500,000 tons of the products to Laos, and less than 12,000 tons to Cambodia since the beginning of this year.

Thien said Vietnam lacks the necessary maritime infrastructure (e.g. deep seaports and big ships) to move the cement.

Meanwhile, Vietnamese firms are having a tough time trying to break into Asian cement markets because they are surrounded by big exporters such as China and Thailand. Thus, Vietnam can only hope to tap distant markets, like Africa and Brazil. However, cement’s going rate, $40-45 per ton, doesn’t begin to cover shipping costs, let alone furnish a profit.

Thien added that carving into Vietnam’s limestone mountains to furnish materials for cement production will degrade the country’s natural landscape.

A way out of the woods

The Construction Ministry has begun a review of the cement industry’s development plan.

The ministry has also asked the government to spur domestic cement consumption. “If the usage of cement in road construction is increased, the situation will quickly change,” Thien said.

He also suggested that investment in deeper seaports to facilitate shipping the materials from the north to the south should be considered.

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No restriction on rice exports this year: official

No restriction on rice exports this year: officialVietnam has no intention to restrict rice exports in the remaining months of 2010, a government official said Friday.


Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Cao Duc Phat made the statement in response to recent speculation that Vietnam, the world’s second largest rice exporter, may put a limit on shipments of the grain on food security concerns.


The ministry said it will monitor weather conditions and other factors, making sure the country can meet both domestic and export demand for the staple.


Despite the absence of export restrictions, Phat asked local businesses to watch the market carefully and choose the right time to deliver their contracts in order to ensure profit for farmers and themselves.


According to the Vietnam Food Association, prices for the highest quality Vietnamese rice variety rose US$20 per ton from last week to reach $450. This was the third consecutive increase over the past three weeks, the association said.


Vietnam had originally planned to export 6 million tons of the grain this year. However, Nguyen Tri Ngoc, director of the Cultivation Department at the agriculture ministry, said earlier this month that the country may ship up to 7 million tons of rice this year as there was ample supply.

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Agriculture sees annual growth of 3.8 percent

pepper

The agriculture sector is striving to reach an annual GDP growth rate of 3.5-3.8 percent during the 2010-2015 period.

At the sector’s patriotic emulation conference in Hanoi Tuesday, the Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Diep Kinh Tan said that the sector should focus on building a modern and sustainable agricultural sector which is capable of producing high quality and competitive commodities in large volumes, while ensuring the nation’s food security.

The sector plans to achieve an annual production growth of 4-4.5 percent and an increase in export turnover of 6.5-7 percent to US$21 billion per year. It will attempt to increase forest coverage to 43 percent, realise a seed crop output of 47 million tons, including 40 million tons of rice, and an annual seafood output of 4 million tons. Farmers per-capita incomes are also expected to reach VND20 million per annum.

According to the deputy minister, agriculture is the economic sector to suffer the most from climate change, disasters, epidemics and international competition, while the amount of useable land and number of workers are diminishing.

To reach this target, Tan said that the sector has put forward a number of solutions on science and technology, marketing, human resources development and investments in technical infrastructure and production.

During the 2006-2010 period, the agriculture and rural development sector made many important achievements in rice, other industrial crops, animal husbandry and seafood production, earning between VND50-200 million, VND7 billion, per hectare per year. Its added value rose by 3.4 percent per year compared with the Government’s target of 3-3.2 percent.

Also in the reviewed period, Vietnam exported almost 25 million tonnes of rice worth more than VND10 billion and ensured its food security. The nation exported more than $20.6 billion of seafood and its forest coverage has risen from 38 percent in 2006 to 39.8 percent in 2009.

From 2006-2009, the sector approved 160 ODA projects totalling almost $1.42 billion, of which non-refundable aid made up 45 percent.

A number of Vietnam’s agro-forestry and fisheries trademarks are now firmly established in domestic and foreign markets such as Mekong Delta tra fish, Vinh Long province’s Nanh Chon rice, Dien Bien rice, Nam Roi grapefruit and Buon Ma Thuot coffee.

 

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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

USDA forecasts strong corn import from Vietnam

HCMC – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has forecast Vietnam will import 1.6 million tons of corn this year, up by 28% from last year, said the Vietnamese Market Analysis and Forecast Joint Stock Company.

Pham Duc Binh, deputy chairman of the Vietnam Animal Feed Association, however, said the nation would import around 1.25 million tons, equivalent to last year’s figure.

Regarding the USDA’s forecast, Binh said the department had gauged corn demand this year based on Vietnam’s growth rate and pork demand. “Pig farming in the country is in trouble due to blue-ear disease which has led consumers to shift to alternative foods like chicken and seafood,” Binh said.

The world corn price formerly stood at around US$230 per ton but then increased to US$260 after Russia decided to ban wheat export. The price along with 5% import tariff from outside the ASEAN region disenables imports to compete with local products, Binh added.

According to the association, world corn and wheat prices are fluctuating strongly. As a result, animal feed factories in Vietnam use materials in stock before deciding what materials they have to import.

Wheat and corn demand in the country is expected to surge sharply in the future to serve animal feed production as a large amount of cassava will be used for growing ethanol production.

Vietnam is the fifth largest corn importer in Asia after Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Malaysia.

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Vietnam ships rice to China in ‘unofficial trade,’ group says

Vietnam ships rice to China in ‘unofficial trade,’ group saysTraders in Vietnam, the second-biggest rice exporter, may have “unofficially” shipped about 600,000 tons to China this year across the nation’s northern border, according to the Vietnam Food Association.

Most of the shipments were made from April to July amid signs of increased demand from China, Huynh Minh Hue, general-secretary of the association, said Monday by phone. Through official channels, Vietnam has shipped less than 100,000 tons to China this year, Hue said.

China, the world’s most populous nation, consumes about 500 million tons of all grains a year, and maintains stockpiles of about 40 percent of annual demand, according to March comments from China Grain Reserves Corp. China’s rice output may fall as much as 7 percent this year after floods, Li Qiang, managing director at Shanghai JC Intelligence Co., said in August.

“It is difficult to say whether the country is short of rice or not because the country has a very big stockpile,” Vietnam Food Association’s Hue said. “These are just estimates, we don’t have exact figures for border trade,” Hue said.

Vietnam will meet a target to ship about six million tons of rice this year, said Nguyen Thanh Bien, Vietnam’s deputy minister of Industry and Trade.

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Sunday, August 22, 2010

Vietnam to ship 100,000 tons of rice to Bangladesh

Vietnam to ship 100,000 tons of rice to BangladeshVinafood 2, Vietnam’s major rice exporter, said it has signed a contract to sell 100,000 tons of medium-grade 15 percent broken rice to Bangladesh.

The Ho Chi Minh City-based company, also known as Vietnam Southern Food Corporation, will provide the grain at US$389 per ton. 

The company described the South Asian country as a burgeoning market. Bangladesh recently imported 178,000 tons of rice from Vietnam and plans to buy another 200,000 tons. Vietnam is now the most competitive rice supplier for Bangladesh, the company said.

However, it noted that some competitive Vietnamese exporters are beggining to undercut each other. The tactics have led the national food association to caution its members against predatory pricing.

Vinafood 2, the industry giant, has asked the government to give it the right to oversee the whole Bangladeshi market. If the government agrees, Vinafood 2 will have final approval over all export contracts to the country and will be responsible for assigning contracts to other exporters.

Vietnam is set to meet this year’s rice export target of 6 million tons, Nguyen Thanh Bien, deputy minister of industry and trade, said this week.

Vietnam's rice exports rank second only to Thailand. The nation has shipped more than 4 million tons, valued at around $2 billion so far this year, according to official figures.

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Saturday, August 21, 2010

Ample rice supply boosts exports beyond annual target

Ample rice supply boosts exports beyond annual targetVietnam may ship 7 million tons of rice this year, 17 percent higher than the annual target, as there is ample supply of the grain, an agriculture official said.

The country has harvested more than 26 million tons of paddy so far this year and is set to reap another 13 million tons in the remaining months, Nguyen Tri Ngoc, director of the Cultivation Department at the agriculture ministry, told the Vietnam Economic Times Monday.

He said there would be sufficient rice for the domestic market even if  6.5-7 million tons of rice were exported this year. Local food companies have stocked around 1.4 million tons of rice, he added.

Vietnam, the world’s second largest rice exporter after Thailand, had planned to export 6 million tons of the grain this year. So far, more than 4 million tons valued at around $2 billion have been shipped, according to official figures.

Ngoc said there is no need to worry about rice supplies in Vietnam now, but the country is short on other grains used as animal feed.

Vietnam still has to import huge amounts of corn and soya bean meal, he said.

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