New draft document on solar power projects to be filed

Update: December, 12/2019 – 08:55

Rooftop solar panels are installed in Ninh Thuận Province. — Photo evn.com.vn

HÀ NỘI — A draft document on solar power development will be filed to the Prime Minister for approval on December 15, local media reported.

Under the draft, bidding price for the output of solar power production, also known as the feed in tariff (FiT), is set at VNĐ1,916 (8.38 US cents) per kWh for rooftop projects, VNĐ1,620 (7.09 cents) per kWh for ground projects and VNĐ1,758 (7.69 cents) per kWh for floating projects. Tiếp tục đọc “New draft document on solar power projects to be filed”

Update: China Risks Flare-up over Malaysian, Vietnamese Gas Resources

 

December 13, 2019  |  AMTI Brief

Update: China Risks Flare-up over Malaysian, Vietnamese Gas Resources

The Chinese survey vessel Haiyang Dizhi 8 along with its coast guard and paramilitary escorts left Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone on October 23, ending a standoff with Vietnamese ships that began more than four months earlier. The de-escalation seems to have been in response to the departure a day earlier of the drilling rig Hakuryu 5 from Vietnam’s oil and gas Block 06-01, which is operated by Russia’s Rosneft.

The standoff began on June 16 when a China Coast Guard (CCG) ship started harassing the Hakuryu 5 and the offshore supply vessels servicing it. Automatic Identification System (AIS) data shows that several CCG ships were deployed in succession to keep up the harassment over the course of the standoff, including the 35111, 45111, 4203, 3308, 5303, and 2305. As ships were relieved, they often traveled to the Chinese outpost on Fiery Cross Reef to resupply before either joining the escort mission around the Haiyang Dizhi 8 or heading back to China.

Exactly how many Chinese and Vietnamese vessels were involved in these two related operations over the course of the standoff is unclear. Those broadcasting AIS—mostly the CCG—almost certainly account for just a small percentage of the total number. Some Vietnamese law enforcement vessels had broadcast AIS during the early weeks of the standoff in July, but soon ceased doing so. In October, Vietnamese Major General Nguyen Minh Hoang announced that 50 Vietnamese and 40 Chinese vessels were involved, while others reported as many as 80 Chinese participants.

Only a few opposing ships seem to have been regularly deployed around the Hakuryu 5 throughout the standoff, suggesting that most of these reported vessels were busing escorting the Haiyang Dizhi 8 or, in the case of the Vietnamese, trying to block its operations. A satellite image from late August captured a Vietnam Fisheries Resource Surveillance vessel positioned between the Hakuryu 5, which was being serviced by an offshore supply vessel (identified via AIS as the Crest Argus 5), and CCG ship 5303. The 56-meter Vietnamese vessel is effectively unarmed and less than half the size of the 138-meter 5303, one of China’s advanced Type 818 Zhaoduan-class cutters which sports a 76-mm cannon.

The Hakuryu 5 broadcast AIS only sporadically during the standoff. Its signal was last seen in Block 06-01 on October 17 and then again in port at Vung Tau, Vietnam, on October 26. This lends credence to social media reports that it had left Block 06-01 on October 22 after completing its drilling work. AIS data shows that the last CCG vessel assigned to the area, the 31302 (since renamed the 2305) left the same day heading north. It joined up with the Haiyang Dizhi 8 and its escorts a day later and together the group returned to Hainan.

As for the Haiyang Dizhi 8, it moved north after the first few weeks of the standoff, extending its survey over a much wider area for the next three months. In hindsight, it is clear that the survey area closely matched a group of oil and gas exploration blocks that the China National Offshore Oil Corporation unsuccessfully offered up for foreign bidding in 2012.

Over the course of the standoff, the Haiyang Dizhi 8 and its CCG escorts made multiple resupply trips to Fiery Cross Reef. While ultimately unsuccessful in persuading Vietnam to halt Rosneft’s drilling work in block 06-01, China’s operations demonstrated that its Spratly outposts now allow it to conduct extended pressure campaigns, increasing the costs and risks for its neighbors to operate within the nine dash line.

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The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization founded in 1962 and headquartered in Washington, D.C. It seeks to advance global security and prosperity by providing strategic insights and policy solutions to decisionmakers.

Vietnam makes more drastic efforts to end illegal fishing

 

Deputy Prime Minister Trinh Dinh Dung urged ministries, agencies and 28 coastal localities to make more drastic efforts to terminate violations of Vietnamese fishing boats in international waters within the next six months.

Dung stressed the point while chairing a meeting of the National Steering Committee on illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing on Tuesday.

He tasked the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development to thoroughly consider recommendations of the European Commission (EC) delegation sent to Viet Nam last month to review the country’s efforts in fighting IUU fishing. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam makes more drastic efforts to end illegal fishing”

Congestion in aviation infrastructure needs resolving

SGGP

Does aviation industry develop too rapidly? Are flight tickets sold lower than cost prices? Why does authority continue to grant permission for new airlines enterprises while infrastructure is overloading? These were hot issues that received special attention at the talk ‘ Vietnam Aviation Industry: Opportunities and Challenges’ held by the Ministry of Transportation on December 11 in Hanoi.

Tan Son Nhat Airport has been overloading and waiting for upgrading and expansion. (Photo: SGGP)

Tan Son Nhat Airport has been overloading and waiting for upgrading and expansion. (Photo: SGGP)

Tiếp tục đọc “Congestion in aviation infrastructure needs resolving”

New research on development issues in Vietnam Volume 11, number 11 (2019 November)

Download the full report >>

TABLE OF CONTENT

AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT

Tiếp tục đọc “New research on development issues in Vietnam Volume 11, number 11 (2019 November)”

Vietnam among six nations worst hit by climate change in 20 years

By Minh Nga   December 10, 2019 | 07:48 am GMT+7 VNExpress

Vietnam among six nations worst hit by climate change in 20 years

Nguyen Thi Tu, a resident of Ho Chi Minh City’s District 7, walks on a flooded street as the city was hit by the record tide of more than 1.7 meters on September 30, 2019. Photo by VnExpress/Huu Khoa.

Vietnam is one of six countries most affected by climate change between 1999 and 2018, according to survey results released this week.

The Global Climate Risk Index, published by the German environmental think tank Germanwatch, ranked Vietnam sixth among countries hit hardest by extreme weather events in that period, with its Climate Risk Index (CRI) at 29.83.

Puerto Rico, Myanmar, Haiti, the Philippines and Pakistan are adjudged the worst affected nations with the lowest CRI scores.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam among six nations worst hit by climate change in 20 years”

Vietnam textile industry orders hit by African competition

By Anh Minh   December 10, 2019 | 01:59 pm GMT+7 VnExpress

Vietnam textile industry orders hit by African competition

Women work at a garment factory in northern Vietnam. Photo by Reuters.

Vietnamese textile manufacturers are seeing orders decline with buyers moving to others, cheaper developing countries.

Normally, by the end of a year they would have enough orders for the whole of the following year, Nguyen Van Thoi, chairman of TNG Investment and Trading JSC, which makes garments, said.

But this year many businesses have said they do not have enough orders for 2020, with some reporting a 20 percent drop in orders from last year. Besides, many have not signed long-term contracts for products, only monthly or quarterly, he said.

A Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS) official, who wished not to be named, said many orders have shifted to emerging countries in Africa, while competition with textiles superpowers like China, India and Bangladesh is becoming increasingly fierce.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam textile industry orders hit by African competition”

Diplomats: US backs out of North Korea human rights meeting

December 9, 2019 AP
CORRECTS TO REMOVE INCORRECT QUOTE FROM TWEET – FILE – In this June 30, 2019, file photo, U.S. President Donald Trump meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the border village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone, South Korea. North Korea has again insulted President Donald Trump after he tweeted that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wouldn’t want to abandon a special relationship between the two leaders and affect the American presidential election by resuming hostile acts. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United States changed its mind and is now refusing to sign a letter that would have authorized the U.N. Security Council to hold a meeting on the human rights situation in North Korea, diplomats said Monday.

Without support from the United States, European and other countries that wanted the U.N.’s most powerful body to discuss human rights in North Korea can’t go ahead Tuesday because they are now one vote short of the minimum nine “yes” votes required, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because discussions were private.

Tiếp tục đọc “Diplomats: US backs out of North Korea human rights meeting”

Xuất khẩu lao động trong thời đại tin học

Chào các bạn,

Xuất khẩu lao động là một trong những cách rất tốt cho một quốc gia kiếm tiền khắp thế giới. Và trong thời đại tin học chúng ta có thể xuất khẩu lao động dễ hơn ngày xưa rất nhiều. Bạn chẳng phải đi đâu cả, ở ngay trong nhà bạn, mở công ty, tìm đủ lao động, và cho thiên hạ khắp thế giới biết để mà gọi bạn và thuê lao động của bạn. Đây là vài ví dụ xuất khẩu lao động, mà lao động của bạn ngồi ở VN để làm việc với bất kì nước ngoài nào: Tiếp tục đọc “Xuất khẩu lao động trong thời đại tin học”

Mekong ký sự

Ấn chuột vào chữ "Youtube" ở cuối màn ảnh, bên phải, để xem trực tiếp trên Youtube và thấy được danh sách của tất cả các clips trong chuỗi bài. Tổng cộng 4800 km chiều dài sông, khoảng 37 tiếng đồng hồ video clips.

Đi dọc dòng Mekong từ thượng nguồn đến hạ nguồn, do Đài Truyền Hình TP Hồ Chí Minh thực hiện.

Phát triển Đồng Bằng Sông Cửu Long

Chào các bạn,

Mình viết bài này về phát triển Đồng Bằng Sông Cửu Long vì (1) mình yêu người dân miền Tây rất hiền lành chân thật, (2) mình phục dân miền Tây với tinh thần chiến đấu và sáng tạo đã được minh chứng hơn 300 năm, (3) ĐBCCL là một trong những vùng bị ảnh hưởng nhất thế giới bởi biến đổi khí hậu, (4) phát triển ĐBSCL cũng là một phần lớn của phát triển đất nước, và (5) quan trọng nhất là chính sách của VN cho đến lúc này là không công bình với người dân ở ĐBSCL.

Cho phép mình nói về điểm quan trọng nhất, điểm số 5 bên trên: Chính sách của VN cho đến lúc này là không công bình với người dân ở ĐBSCL. Tiếp tục đọc “Phát triển Đồng Bằng Sông Cửu Long”

Vietnam and China promise to keep talking as they look to settle differences over South China Sea

  • Three-day meeting in Beijing ends with pledges to continue working towards a peaceful solution in the disputed waters
  • Talks follow prolonged stand-off in resource-rich waters
A Chinese coast guard ship photographed from a Vietnamese vessel in the South China Sea. Photo: Reuters
A Chinese coast guard ship photographed from a Vietnamese vessel in the South China Sea. Photo: Reuters

China and Vietnam said that they would continue to look for ways to peacefully resolve their conflict over the South China Sea at the end of a three-day meeting to discuss border issues.

A statement from the Chinese foreign ministry on Friday said the vice-ministerial level talks had discussed border cooperation on land and, more sensitively, maritime issues.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam and China promise to keep talking as they look to settle differences over South China Sea”

Why Vietnam Needs Six Airlines

Ralph Jennings

Vietnam already supports five operating commercial airlines and a sixth is on the way. That’s because so many of the country’s newly minted middle class is literally going places.

Vietnam’s civil aviation authority estimates air passenger traffic will reach 131 million by 2020 following average growth of 16% last year and this year. By 2030, the authority expects 280 million civilian air trips per year.

“All the airplanes are full. The Hanoi-Ho Chi Minh trip is packed every day,” says Mike Lynch, managing director with SSI Institutional Brokerage in Ho Chi Minh City. “They put up airlines and they just fill right up.” Tiếp tục đọc “Why Vietnam Needs Six Airlines”