Monday, October 25, 2010

Vietnam bans steel projects using old technology

Vietnam bans steel projects using old technologyThe government has announced it will stop licensing steel projects using outdated technology, following complaints of inordinate power consumption by local steel producers.

Some provinces have approved steel projects that use energy inefficient and environmentally harmful technologies, and this is one of the reasons behind the country’s high power consumption, the government said in a statement on its website Tuesday, citing Industry and Trade Minister Vu Huy Hoang.

Hoang said such projects as well as others outside the government’s plan for the industry are banned with immediate effect.

According to the development plan set for the industry, it was to have an output of 15-18 million tons of steel products by 2020. However, with aggressive and haphazard licensing, the combined capacity of existing projects has already reached 60 million tons per year.

National power utility Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) last week said part of the responsibility for power shortages in the country lay with steel producers, many of whom were using outdated technology that consumes a large amount of power.

EVN requested the government to tighten controls over the production technology used at steel plants. Large steel producers should be compelled to build their own power plants, it said.

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Vietnam bans steel projects using old technology

Vietnam bans steel projects using old technologyThe government has announced it will stop licensing steel projects using outdated technology, following complaints of inordinate power consumption by local steel producers.

Some provinces have approved steel projects that use energy inefficient and environmentally harmful technologies, and this is one of the reasons behind the country’s high power consumption, the government said in a statement on its website Tuesday, citing Industry and Trade Minister Vu Huy Hoang.

Hoang said such projects as well as others outside the government’s plan for the industry are banned with immediate effect.

According to the development plan set for the industry, it was to have an output of 15-18 million tons of steel products by 2020. However, with aggressive and haphazard licensing, the combined capacity of existing projects has already reached 60 million tons per year.

National power utility Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) last week said part of the responsibility for power shortages in the country lay with steel producers, many of whom were using outdated technology that consumes a large amount of power.

EVN requested the government to tighten controls over the production technology used at steel plants. Large steel producers should be compelled to build their own power plants, it said.

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Ceramics festival helps build brands

Visitors view this record-breaking ceramic bowl called “Van Lang” made by Minh Long Co with gold plating - Photo: Hoai Nam
HCMC – Binh Duong Province’s Ceramics Festival that ended on Wednesday set nine new national records for ceramics and helped build brand names and development strategies for the industry.

According to organizers, about 50,000 people a day, mostly from Binh Duong and HCMC, visited the festival called “Vietnamese ceramics – a combination of traditions, texture and development”. A Vietnamese collection of antique ceramics broke one of the nine records set at the expo.

For the first time under one roof, visitors saw ceramics made by artisans across the country and could view the history of their development.

The festival was a first for Vietnam and Binh Duong which has contributed 70% of ceramics exports in recent years. The festival assembled 19 handicraft villages and more than 50 ceramics manufacturers across the country.

Experts and manufacturers at a conference held by the Binh Duong Ceramics Association shared about brand building and market strategy for local ceramics, Tuoi Tre reported.

Vietnamese ceramics have been competing with products from countries including India, Mexico and especially China in import markets such as the U.S. and Europe as well as locally. Hence, having a brand name and a marketing strategy for both export and local markets is vital. Many pottery villages needed to update to more modern technology, the conference heard.

The exhibition was also useful for manufacturers to listen to customers’ feedback.

Some Vietnamese ceramics such as Minh Long ceramics and earthenware and porcelain products from Bat Trang and Bau Truc have already developed a reputation in importing countries.

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Vietnam to import 3 billion cubic meters of gas from 2015

A security guard walks past two gas tanks at Nam Con Son Gas Processing Terminal at Dinh Co Area in the southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau. The terminal is partly owned by PetroVietnam Gas - Photo: Van Nam
HCMC – Vietnam will have to import some three billion cubic meters of gas each year from 2015 to meet the stronger demand for industrial and household gas use, said an executive of PetroVietnam Gas Corporation (PV Gas).

Do Van Hau, deputy general director of PV Gas, told a seminar on Vietnam’s gas industry held here on Wednesday that from 2015, the country would annually consume 17 billion cubic meters of gas, while PV Gas as the dominant gas supplier could supply only 14 billion cubic meters by that time.

“So the gas amount supplied each year will fall far short of the demand from 2015. PetroVietnam Gas is preparing itself to secure overseas gas sources to import three billion cubic meters each year,” said Hau.

According to PV Gas, the corporation this year can supply a total of 8.5 billion cubic meters of gas of all kinds for local demand.

This gas amount will be used for the generation of 36 billion kWh of power, and production of 800,000 tons of fertilizer, 100,000 tons of oil, and 700,000 tons of liquefied petroleum gas.

Hau said that apart from gas import, exploitation at local gas fields would also be bolstered.

After some recent researches conducted by PV Gas and its foreign partners at some offshore areas in the Central Region, the corporation found out that Danang, Dong Hoi and Quang Binh are some provinces that hold much gas potential.

“PV Gas still continues further investigations at these localities so that we could start the first gas exploitation there next year,” he added.

At the seminar on Wednesday, PV Gas announced to issue 95 million shares, equivalent to 5% of its total chartered capital of VND18.95 trillion, via auction at the Hochiminh Stock Exchange. The corporation will also undergo equitization this year.

Do Khang Ninh, president and CEO of PV Gas, told the Daily at the seminar that apart from auctioning off all the shares worth 5% of its current chartered capital, PV Gas would finally sell out 25% stake, while the remaining 75% will still be held by the State.

Ninh added that “some 20 large companies from other countries are showing keen interests to become our strategic shareholders.”

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Car prices rise on stronger dollar

HCMC - Customers now have to pay more for locally assembled and imported cars as some enterprises have revised up selling prices given the strengthening of the U.S. dollar against the Vietnamese dong.

The central bank’s latest move to let the dong fall by 2.09% against the dollar has put a number of companies on tenterhooks, especially those importing cars from abroad.

With a weaker dong, the new trading price range is VND18,364-VND19,500 per dollar, instead of the previous VND19,100.

Earlier, on February 10, the central bank also changed the reference exchange rate by 3.4%, with the dong trading at VND17,941 to VND18,544 per dollar, which allowed the spot rate to be as high as VND19,100. Then almost all auto importers increased prices.

According to showrooms of imported cars in HCMC, business has been dull since early this month when they announced new prices following the central bank decision. They said the weakened dong had hurt their business.

For example, buyers of a Kia Forte car priced at US$32,000 would have to spend at least VND13 million more when the dong was used for payment.

With the continued rise of the dollar plus higher interest rates for consumer loans, VAT and registration fees, car consumption would see no growth or even fall this year.

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Saigontourist arranges MICE tour for 1,500 guests

HCMC – Saigontourist Travel Service Company will on Thursday start the MICE (meetings, incentives, conventions, exhibitions) trip in the coastal city of Nha Trang for the first batch of a big group of 1,500 staff of Prudential Vietnam, the tour operator said.

Doan Thi Thanh Tra, marketing manager of Saigontourist, said that during three days, the first group of 500 guests would join team-building activities, sight seeing tours, and social activities among others.

She said along with the big group from Prudential Vietnam, Saigontourist was also arranging MICE tours for 20 other groups of 8,000 local travelers this month. The number of such guests is increasing more this month because as season for local MICE guests is coming.

According to Tra, the demand for MICE tours from local guests has been increasing strongly in recent years.

The company has served 40,000 local and international MICE travelers in the January-August period, up 20% year-on-year. The segment of local MICE guests posted stronger growth at 32.2%, she said, adding locals prefer destinations like Phan Thiet, Nha Trang, Danang, and Hoi An.

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Banks send mixed signals on forex

HCMC – Two foreign banks have offered different forecasts of the Vietnam dong/U.S. dollar exchange rate for late this year and early next year, with one saying the local currency would stabilize and the other believing  the dollar would get firmer.

The chief executive officer of HSBC Bank (Vietnam) Ltd. on Wednesday projected the exchange rate between the dong and the dollar would be stable toward the end of this year and early next year.

Tom W. Tobin was speaking in response to a question from the audience about the possibility of further depreciation of the dong at the “Vietnam Business Climate Outlook 2010-2011” luncheon organized by the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (EuroCham) in HCMC.

The exchange rate will be “stable and below VND20,000 to the U.S. dollar this year and early next year. So, the next six months will be pretty stable,” Tobin said, referring to the HSBC projection that he presented at the event.

Meanwhile, the news site VnExpress.net on Wednesday quoted a Standard Chartered Bank research report as saying the dong would be trading at VND19,900 per dollar by the year-end but the rate would surge to VND20,000 early next year and VND20,800 by the end of the same year.

Last month, the State Bank of Vietnam devalued the dong by 2.09% to allow commercial banks to raise their dollar price to the highest level of around VND19,500. This was the second depreciation this year.

Tobin said the adjustment was “reasonable and realistic” as it took some pressure off the market and that the change would take effect for the rest of the year. The U.S. economy still coped with challenges and this is why the greenback is forecast not to put much pressure on further depreciation of the dong.

Furthermore, Vietnam is increasingly trading with non-U.S. counterparts and a lot of its trade is now intra-Asia. But, Tobin noted the dong stability would depend on macro-economic issues.

Tobin told reporters after the event that the Vietnamese Government and the State Bank of Vietnam had taken effective measures to balance macro-economic factors. “So, I think we will see more of the same for the second half of this year… more stability in the foreign exchange market and the money market.”

Tobin told the Daily about a number of proper actions by the Government and the SBV. They have helped the market by injecting more liquidity and regulating the gold market to curb speculation and putting some pressure on State-owned enterprises to sell their surplus dollar funds into the market.

“So, all these things help stabilize the market. I think they have given a very clear idea that they want that macro-economic stabilization is one of the priorities so that it gives the market a bit of comfort and they are acting according to that objective,” he said.

Tobin described the regulations governing safety ratios and charter capital increase at credit institutions as good objectives to make the banking sector stronger and more robust.

“Making it stronger is to make it better capitalized which would be better able to withstand shocks. Just look at the global financial crisis, some of the banks are not adequately capitalized to meet the shock of the system,” he said.

But according to the Standard Chartered report, achieving the growth target remains a priority for Vietnam, so the possibility of the dong being further devalued to prop up the export sector is high.

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