VietNamNet Bridge – Billions of dollars worth of revenue from providing equipments, machines and accessories for industrial projects have been falling into the hands of the Chinese contractors because Vietnamese enterprises remain uncooperative.

Vietnamese enterprises choosy and uncooperative
Phan Tu Giang, General Director of PV Shipyard, an oil rig manufacture
corporation, said that he recently had a working session with Cuu Long Vinashin
steel mill to discuss the purchase of steel for making oil rigs, but the
enterprise kept indifferent to the order.
According to Giang, the products of Cuu Long Vinashin still do not have any
registration certificates in accordance with international standards. PV
Shipyard then suggested two solutions to the problem. However, to date, the
steel manufacturer has not taken any move, reasoning a lot of difficulties.
Meanwhile, Cuu Long Vinashin has not given the final answer so far.
Ryu Hangha, General Director of Doosan Vina, a heavy industry enterprise, said
he identifies with Giang.
He said that when negotiating with PetroVietnam on the contract to supply
auxiliary equipments for boilers, the oil and gas group said that it would only
accept to buy Doosan Vina’s products, if the prices are 10 percent lower than
the import prices.
“Could you find any enterprise in the supporting industries which can make the
products cheaper by 10 percent than the imports?” he questioned.
And then he answered “no.” It’s simply because all the input materials for
making products need to be imported from other countries, because they cannot be
made domestically. Meanwhile, China proves to be a reasonable supply source with
existing materials, experiences and higher efficiency. Therefore, the prices of
domestic products cannot be cheaper than the imports.
In fact, all enterprises in Vietnam strive to increase the locally made content
ratios in their products to reduce the production costs. However, they have been
facing too many difficulties in implementing the plan.
Giang said PV Shipyard plans to build a jack-up rig with the total investment
capital of 100 million dollars. Meanwhile, the company can only buy 1.4 million
dollars worth of domestically made materials and equipments.
As such, the domestic supplies can only provide 1.3 percent of the total
procurement value of machines and equipments, accounting for 0.8 percent of the
value of the total project. The locally made content ratio in the project is
expected to be at 34.7 percent.
Giang wishes to raise the locally made content ratio to 50 percent, but it has
given up the idea. In order to obtain the 50 percent localization ratio
threshold, PV Shipyard would have to buy 30 million dollars worth of
domestically made equipments, which proves to be an “impossible mission.”
Multi-billion dollars fall into the hands of Chinese
According to Phan Dang Phong, Deputy Head of the Mechanical Engineering Research
Institute, Chinese suppliers can earn billions of dollars from the weakness of
Vietnamese enterprises.
From now to 2025, Vietnam would build 35 thermopower plants in the country,
which have the total investment capital of 43.5 billion dollars, including 32.7
billion dollars to be spent on machines and equipments.
“We spend money to build power plants, but we create jobs for Chinese and bring
profits to Chinese mechanical engineering industry,” Phong said.
Meanwhile, according to Giang, the biggest problem is that Vietnamese
enterprises cannot provide products at low prices.
“Our jack-up rig is priced at 200 million dollars, which is equal to a
Singaporean product. Meanwhile, China offers the product at just 180 million
dollars,” Giang said.
The problem here is that PV Shipyard cannot offer products at low prices because
it cannot find domestic integrated equipment. Giang has been trying to persuade
domestic partners to make the equipment, but the partners believe that these are
risky projects.
Pham Huyen