IUU fishing combat

Ben Tre province takes concerted efforts to combat IUU fishing

The People’s Committee of the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre has directed local agencies and administrations to carry out urgent task and solutions to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing until September.

Ben Tre province takes concerted efforts to combat IUU fishing. (Photo: VNA)
Ben Tre province takes concerted efforts to combat IUU fishing. (Photo: VNA)

Ben Tre (VNA) – The People’s Committee of the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre has directed local agencies and administrations to carry out urgent tasks and solutions to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing until September.

In an official dispatch, the provincial People’s Committee required relevant agencies, units and localities to strictly implement the Party Central Committee Secretariat’s Directive No. 32-CT/TW dated April 10, 2024 on IUU fishing and related documents, while preparing meticulously contents and working plan for the fifth working round with the inspection delegation from the European Commision.

Agencies and local administrations were instructed to arrange sufficient human resources, funding, equipment and vehicles to carry out the task of combating IUU fishing and assign clear responsibilities to agencies and functional forces under their management so as to completely resolve existing shortcomings and problems.

The provincial Border Guard Command, police force, and Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) should direct relevant forces to increase the frequency of patrolling at sea and fishing ports, and prevent vessels violating anti-IUU regulations from entering and exiting ports as well as operating at sea.

Functional forces must strictly handle IUU practices and punish those involved, especially violations in VMS connections and illegal fishing in foreign waters.

The DARD should promptly complete the granting of fishing licences, vessel registration and food safety certificates for fishing vessels, fully update fishing vessel data into the national fisheries database (VNFishbase) and report the results by the end of this month.

Statistics of the provincial Department of Agriculture and Rural Development show that Ben Tre currently has 98.58% of its ships installed with VMS devices. Since the beginning of this year, no local vessel has been arrested or dealt by foreign countries./.

VNA

See more

Workers process shrimp products for export at a factory of Sao Ta Food Joint Stock Company in Soc Trang province. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam becomes Brazil’s 2nd largest aquatic product supplier

According to the Department of Customs under the Ministry of Finance, Vietnam’s aquatic product exports reached $655 million in February, marking a 44.5% year-on-year increase. This brought the total for the first two months of 2025 to $1.42 billion, up 19% compared to the same period in 2024.

Credit growth will continue to be the key target in Vietnam’s new development policy, (Photo vnbusiness.vn)

HCM City bank lending growth down in 2025

According to deputy director of the State Bank of Vietnam’s HCM City office Nguyen Duc Lenh, outstanding credit as of February was 3.936 trillion, down 0.17% from December 2024 but 12.2% up year-on-year.

Authorities inspect the procedures of vehicle operators transporting goods at the Huu Nghi International Border Gate (Lang Son province). (Photo: VNA)

Customs trade hits 1.05 billion USD on first day of new model

Realising the 12th Party Central Committee's Resolution 18 on streamlining the political system’s organisational structure, on March 15, the customs sector began operating under a three-tier model: the Department of Customs, regional customs offices, and border checkpoints. This reorganisation has reduced the number of units by 485, or 53.77%, from 902

Long Hau 1 Industrial Park in Can Giuoc district, Long An province. (Photo: VNA)

Industrial real estate expects a boost from policies, FDI

The acceleration of legal obstacles removal in recent industrial real estate projects is creating growth opportunities for many businesses participating in this segment. Notably, this is also one of the key factors contributing to attracting investment and boosting growth for real estate in 2025.

Construction site of Terminal 3 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam Airlines, Vietjet Air flights to operate from Tan Son Nhat’s new terminal in May

Designed to handle 20 million passengers annually, Terminal T3 of the Tan Son Nhat International Airport includes four main components: the passenger terminal, a multi-story parking facility integrated with non-aviation services, the elevated road system at the terminal frontage, and aircraft aprons. The total investment for the terminal is nearly 11 trillion VND (431.2 million USD), with construction beginning in December 2022

HCM City is now a regional specialised financial centre (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam should be flexible in selecting financial centre models: expert

Tuan also highlighted the importance of human capital, one of the five important factors to successfully build a financial centre, citing the Global Financial Centres Index, which ranks business environment, human capital, infrastructure, market development, and reputation as the key drivers of success.

Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Hong Dien (L) and US Secretary of Energy Chris Wright in Washington D.C. on March 13. (Photo: VOV)

Vietnam, US look to strengthen comprehensive energy cooperation

Vietnam’s consistent policy is to foster a balanced, sustainable, stable, and win-win economic relationship with the US, the minister stated. Vietnam does not intend to create any barriers that could negatively impact the US’s workers or its economic and national security, Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Hong Dien said.

Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Chi Dung speaks at the first meeting of the steering committee for the building of a project on the private economic sector's development in Hanoi on March 15. (Photo: VNA)

Private sector's development key to Vietnam’s economic growth

Currently, the private economic sector comprises over 6.1 million business establishments, including approximately 940,000 registered enterprises and over 5.2 million household businesses. The sector contributes around 50% of the country’s GDP, accounts for over 56% of total social investment, employs approximately 82% of the workforce, and generates around 30% of state budget revenue and more than 30% of total import-export turnover.