Steel producers hit hard by pandemic

The Vietnam Steel Association (VSA)’s member enterprises suffered a strong reduction in production and business in the first quarter of this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Steel producers hit hard by pandemic ảnh 1Steel bars are loaded at the Viet Duc Steel Manufacturing JSC in Vinh Phuc Province. In the first quarter, VSA-member enterprises produced 5.4 million tonnes. (Photo: nhandan.vn)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - The Vietnam Steel Association (VSA)’s member enterprises suffered a strong reduction in production and business in the first quarter of this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the first quarter, VSA member enterprises recorded a plunge of 15 percent in steel output to 5.4 million tonnes and 20 percent in consumption to 4.4 million tonnes year-on-year.

Meanwhile, steel exports reached 300,000 tonnes, a reduction of 38 percent from the same period last and 21 percent compared to December 2019, according to the association.

VSA vice-chairman Trinh Khoi Nguyen said the COVID-19 pandemic is having a significant impact on the domestic steel industry because steel producers depend on importing input materials from China. Trading activities between Vietnam and China have greatly slowed and have even been temporarily suspended due to the disease.

The Viet Trung Metallurgy and Mineral Co, Ltd (VTM) is the most severely affected company among members of the Vietnam Steel Corporation (VNSTEEL) due to the pandemic.

VTM is located near the Vietnam-China border and depends on trade between the two countries. Most of VTM's raw materials and equipment are imported from China, meaning all the firm's trading activities are now stagnant and its coal inventory is insufficient to meet the demand for steel production.

The Vietnam-Italy Steel Joint Stock Company (VIS) has also faced many difficulties.

VIS expects its total revenue to reduce by 65 billion VND this year to 3.6 trillion VND. In the first quarter alone, it lost tens of billions of dong.

The VSA has forecasted that this year, the steel industry will continue facing difficulties, including from protectionism in global markets and a lack of recovery in the domestic real estate market.

The impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and price reductions in the world steel market have caused a plunge of steel prices and trading activities on the domestic market, according to the association. Higher inventories of steel products and high bank loan interest have made their business efficiency reduce.

Nguyen said to solve those difficulties, the Government needs to give financial support to steel enterprises, reduce interest and extend debt payment deadlines. It should also have solutions to smooth customs clearance for import input materials that steel producers need to maintain their production.

Besides that, domestic steel producers need to restructure their products, improve the competitiveness of their products and seek more export markets, Nguyen said.

According to steel expert Nguyen Van Sua, steel producers with modern production technology and low energy consumption would be able to continue running while producers with old production technology and high production costs would struggle to compete.
He said the State should extend tax payment deadlines and cut tax for steel producers to help them overcome difficulties./.
VNA

See more

Farmers in the Mekong Delta province of An Giang harvest rice grown under the project 'Sustainable Development of One Million Hectares of High-Quality, Low-Emission Rice Associated with Green Growth in the Mekong Delta by 2030.' (Photo: VNA)

Promoting high-quality rice exports amid mounting challenges

According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment (MAE), an estimated 600,000 tonnes of rice worth 370 million USD was exported in January, up 12.4% in volume and 16.9% in value year-on-year. The average export price reached 616.6 USD per tonne, up 4%.

Fuel supply in Hanoi remains stable. (Photo: VNA)

Fuel prices rise sharply from 3 pm on March 7

Since the beginning of this year, domestic fuel prices have undergone 11 adjustments. During this period, both RON95 and E5 RON92 experienced four decreases and seven increases, while diesel oil two falls and nine hikes.

Customers buy and sell fuel at a Petrolimex petrol station. (Photo: VNA)

Capital’s fuel market remains stable after March 5 price adjustment

Operations at several petrol stations across Hanoi have run normally. Along major routes, petrol stations remained open and continued to serve customers as usual. The number of vehicles refueling showed no major changes compared to the days before the price adjustment. Sales activities continued without interruption, and there were no long queues or supply disruptions.

Thang Long II Industrial Park in Hung Yen province. (Photo: VNA)

Green industrial parks draw FDI to northern Vietnam

From 2026, the industrial real estate market in the northern region is forecast to enter a new growth phase as strategic infrastructure projects near completion, supply expands, and green industrial parks become a decisive factor for foreign direct investment (FDI).

Border guards from Thanh Hai Border Guard Station patrol fishing vessels entering Phu Hai port in Phu Thuy ward, Lam Dong province. (Photo: VNA)

Lam Dong orders swift action to address IUU fishing gaps

Vice Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Le Trong Yen has directed heads of relevant departments, sectors and localities to strictly implement directives and newly issued regulations on IUU prevention, while strengthening public awareness efforts so fishermen and businesses better understand and comply with the rules.

Permanent Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Hoa Binh speaks at the meeting to review the development strategy and operational framework for the international financial centre. (Photo: VNA)

Deputy PM urges early establishment of trading platforms at Int’l Financial Centre

Chairing a meeting in Hanoi on March 6 to review the development strategy and operational framework for the international financial centre, Binh acknowledged the progress made by relevant ministries and localities in a short period of time. However, he noted that current efforts have largely focused on building the organisational structure and legal framework.

Regza Vietnam Electronics Co., Ltd. (fully invested by Taiwan, China) installs four modern production lines in 2024. (Photo: VNA)

FDI disbursement in Jan–Feb reaches five-year high

The NSO noted that the Republic of Korea (RoK) and Singapore were the largest investors during the period, each registering over 1 billion USD in newly committed capital, accounting for a significant share of total foreign investment inflows into Vietnam.

Rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East on Vietnam’s economy under the baseline scenario is expected to remain limited. (Photo: VNA)

Middle East tensions likely to have moderate impact on Vietnam’s economy: VinaCapital

According to Michael Kokalari, Director of Macroeconomic Analysis and Market Research at VinaCapital, the conflict is unlikely to significantly affect Vietnam. Exports to the Middle East account for less than 3% of Vietnam’s total export turnover, while the likelihood of a large-scale and prolonged ground campaign in Iran is considered relatively low.

VinFast has signed a strategic partnership with six electric motorbike dealers in Indonesia, marking a new step in expanding its distribution network in one of the region’s and the world’s largest motorcycle markets. (Photo: VNA)

VinFast partners with six e-scooter dealers in Indonesia

In preparation for the launch of its electric scooters in Q2/2026, VinFast has signed additional MoUs with six dealers, including PT. IB Motor, PT. Sentrik, PT. Axara Marani, PT. Sukses Sejati Indonesia, PT. Tangguh Inti Motor, and PT. Kiki Motor Persada. These partners are distributors with strong experience in key markets and share a common direction toward green mobility solutions.

Fishermen at Dong Tac fishing port in Phu Yen ward, Dak Lak province prepare to head back to sea after the storm (Photo: VNA)

Dak Lak reviews fishing vessel fleet, steps up fight against IUU fishing

Local authorities are focusing on managing registered fishing vessels and reviewing all records and data related to fishing, purchasing and processing seafood. Violations related to IUU fishing are being strictly handled under the principle of “facing the problem, not avoiding it”.

UK Ambassador to Vietnam Iain Frew addresses the event (Photo: nhandan.vn)

Vietnam, UK step up cooperation in derivatives commodity market development

The British Embassy in Vietnam and the British Consulate-General in Vietnam, in coordination with Boston Consulting Group (BCG), held a capacity-building session under the UK–Vietnam Growth Gateway initiative in Hanoi on March 5 to discuss strategies for developing a transparent and globally connected commodity and derivatives market.