Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh expects more from Siemens’ local operations
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh expects more from Siemens’ local operations
The Government will facilitate Siemens with better conditions to expand its operations in Vietnam.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on February 26 invited German industrial conglomerate Siemens to join local and transfer required technologies to implement local metro projects.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh (right) meets Siemens' CEO and Chairman Roland Busch on February 26. Photo: VGP |
Speaking at a conference with Siemens chairman and CEO Roland Busch, the Prime Minister expected that Siemens will help its Vietnamese peers to acquire the technologies, improve the quality of manpower, and raise the quality of project administration, especially the Metro 2 project in Ho Chi Minh City.
He highly appreciated the German firm’s operations in Vietnam’s gas and power, engineering mechanics, energy infrastructure development, industrial automation, and railway construction.
Chinh also hoped that Siemens will bolster its cooperation with Vietnamese partners in high technology, innovation and R&D, green transition, renewable energy, electric vehicle production, and digital transformation.
“The Vietnamese Government will continue to reform the legal framework and improve the business conditions for all investors and companies, including Siemens and other German enterprises, to set up safe, secure, and stable operations in the long run,” the Prime Minister said.
Vietnam always cherishes and wants to deepen its bilateral relations with Germany in all fields".
Chinh expressed his happiness and eagerness to see the relationship between Vietnam and Germany has become stronger and stronger after 50 years with economic and investment activities playing an essential part.
In his part, CEO Roland Busch said that Siemens is interested in Vietnam’s North-South high-speed railway project.
The German executive said that Siemens is capable of providing engines, cars, and signals, and handing over the required technology for car production to Vietnamese peers.
Speaking highly of the partnership between the two nations, especially between Siemens and its Vietnamese partners, the CEO said that Vietnam has made remarkable progress and transformation.
He said that Vietnam is being boosted by a population of 100 million people and most of them are young, highly-skilled.
The German executive also highly valued Vietnam’s goals in green transition, responses to climate change, high technology development and semiconductor, and traffic infrastructure construction.
Siemens looks forward to expanding its operations in Vietnam, especially in the fields as suggested by the Prime Minister on expectations to help local companies go global, Roland said.
German conglomerate Siemens began its Vietnamese operations in 1993. Now it has three offices in Hanoi, Danang and Ho Chi Minh City along with a factory in the southern province of Binh Duong.
The company’s operations in Vietnam focus on renewable energy and transportation. Its solar farms contribute some one billion kWh to the national grid each year, and Siemens is also known as the top provider of solutions for power transmission, digitalization and automation for local companies.