Vietnam swallows bitter pill from Chinese-contracted $360mn steel project

Nov 17th at 08:26
17-11-2015 08:26:45+07:00

Vietnam swallows bitter pill from Chinese-contracted $360mn steel project

A multimillion-dollar steel and iron plant in northern Vietnam remains a pile of rusted metal, eight years after the Vietnamese developer signed an EPC deal with a Chinese contractor for the megaproject.

 

The construction site of the Thai Nguyen Iron and Steel Plant in Thai Nguyen Province is now covered with weeds, and numerous pieces of equipment have rusted over after having been left unused for years.

The EPC contractor, China Metallurgical Group Corporation (MCC), has left after the developer, Thai Nguyen Iron and Steel JSC (TISCO), was no longer able to make payment in 2012.

TISCO is a subsidiary of the Vietnam Steel Corporation, and is the pioneer of the Vietnamese metallurgical industry.

In July 2007, TISCO and MCC closed an EPC contract for the Thai Nguyen plant, with a design capacity of 500,000 metric tons of iron and steel products a year, with a total investment of VND3.84 trillion, then equal to US$160.8 million.

Under an EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) contract, the contractor designs the installation, procures the necessary materials and builds the project.

The Chinese contractor was paid $35 million in advance to get work started, but ended up asking to increase the investment to VND8.1 trillion (then $298 million) in August 2008.

The total investment in the project is around $361.61 million against the current Vietnamese dong – U.S. dollar exchange rate.

The Vietnamese developer eventually accepted the capital increase proposal, even though the project would then cost nearly twice the initial investment.

In 2012, the developer faced a lack of finance, after disbursing more than VND4.5 trillion ($216.35 million) for the project.

The Vietnamese side had paid 93 percent of the procurement cost for the project, even though it should have been only 90 percent as per the contract.

The Chinese contractor then decided to stop implementing the project and returned to China, leaving behind a huge amount of equipment and machinery it had brought to the construction site.

The machines have now rusted over after being exposed to weather for the last three years.

“We were running out of capital and had no alternative source for additional investment, so the project has stalled since 2012,” Trinh Khoi Nguyen, head of the management board that oversees construction projects of the Vietnam Steel Corporation, admitted.

Even worse, the TISCO could not find an alternative contractor as the MCC had only brought the equipment and machinery to the project without devices to operate or control them.

The project suffered a huge cost overrun because the developer agreed to pay for equipment procurement on the basis of non-fixed prices when negotiating the EPC contract with MCC, according to TISCO deputy general chairman Do Trung Kien.

“TISCO accepted that it would cover the fluctuations on the equipment prices, rather than paying fixed rates,” Nguyen said.

“Unfortunately, machinery prices and foreign exchange rates all spiked sharply after the contract was signed.”

Kien said the TISCO is in talks with the MCC to have the Chinese contractor supply the controllers for the equipment and machinery it had brought to Thai Nguyen.

The Vietnamese developer is also seeking alternative contractors for the project via talks with some Chinese partners.

“It is expected that a new contract will be signed next month to restart the project,” Kien said.

“TISCO is inviting bids from qualified and experienced contractors and consulting firms for the project, and the MCC has also signaled that they want to extend the contract with us.”

tuoitrenews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Vietnamese coffee firms seek opportunities at international fair

Vietnamese enterprises participated in a coffee fair in Seoul to seek business opportunities and partners in the global market, the trade office of Viet Nam in...

Ton Dong A Corp cuts ribbon on $70 million plant

According to newswire Bnews, on November 5, Ton Dong A Corporation has inaugurated the first phase of its $70 million steel sheet plant located in the Dong An 2...

Mega projects turn port city into transport hub

Substantial infrastructure development is turning the northern port city of Haiphong into an attractive destination for investment.

Draft circular specifies rules for mineral exports

The Ministry of Industry and Trade has drafted a circular stipulating that only some qualified businesses are eligible to export minerals.

Local corn farmers empowered to plan future with confidence

Vietnamese corn farmers have recently been enabled to access a new tool to optimise corn yield – a new corn traits with insect protection and weed management named...

Pan Brothers seeks Vietnamese and Cambodian partners

Publicly listed textile manufacturer PT Pan Brothers is seeking local partners to jointly build and operate the company's textile factories in Vietnam and Cambodia...

Engineering sector needs better policy

Mechanical engineering businesses need to get more essential and focused incentives to create their market for development, experts said.

Vietnam’s leading milk producer wants to raise foreign ownership to 100%

Vietnam’s leading dairy producer Vinamilk last week proposed that the government and the lawmaking National Assembly lift the barrier to allow foreign investors to...

Coca-Cola Vietnam reports profit, the first time in 20 years

Coca-Cola Vietnam has reported that it started making profits in 2013, ending two decades of consecutive losses that have been scrutinized by tax officers recently.

Vietnamese corporation builds ship for Russian firm

The Song Thu Shipyard Corporation launched a dredger, the TSHD2000, for Russia's Rosmorport company on November 9.


MOST READ


Back To Top