Three strategic technology products expected to deliver breakthroughs in 2026

With strong leadership from the Party and the State, together with the determination of ministries, sectors, and localities, Vietnam will achieve important initial milestones in strategic technology development within this year

Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Bui Hoang Phuong speaks at the Government's June regular press conference on July 4, 2026. Photo: VNA
Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Bui Hoang Phuong speaks at the Government's June regular press conference on July 4, 2026. Photo: VNA

Hanoi (VNA) - Three strategic technology products, including AI cameras, autonomous mobile robots, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), are expected to produce initial commercial results as early as 2026, announced by Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Bui Hoang Phuong at the Government's June regular press conference on July 4.

At the Government's thematic meeting on June 23, the Prime Minister emphasised the need to concentrate resources on core technologies and strategic technology products, with commercialisation effectiveness serving as the key measure of success.

According to Phuong, following the direction of Party General Secretary and State President To Lam, who heads the Steering Committee for the implementation of Politburo Resolution No. 57-NQ/TW on breakthroughs in sci-tech development, innovation and national digital transformation, the Government and the Prime Minister have taken decisive actions to advance strategic technology development.

In May 2026, after issuing Decision No. 808/QD-TTg, assigning 20 strategic technology development tasks to ministries and sectors, the PM personally chaired two meetings on the matter. On July 3, he chaired another meeting to direct and accelerate the implementation of these strategic technology initiatives.

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung, head of the Government's Task Force on Strategic Technologies, has chaired five meetings and conducted working visits to three Vietnamese enterprises involved in strategic technology development.

As of July 1, the Ministry of Science and Technology had received 28 proposals from ministries, sectors, and central agencies concerning the application and development of strategic technologies. The ministry plans to devote all available resources to reviewing and evaluating these proposals.

"Although these are all major, new, and highly challenging tasks, in line with the Government's requirements, the Ministry of Science and Technology will complete the appraisal process and report them to the Government and the Prime Minister before July 20," Phuong affirmed.

Based on its preliminary review, the ministry has identified several technology areas with a high level of readiness that could produce initial products as early as 2026. These include AI cameras, autonomous mobile robots, UAVs, smart education platforms, as well as several vaccines, biological products, and agricultural biotechnology solutions.

These are technology fields in which Vietnam has already achieved initial results or developed prototype models, he said, adding they have the potential to address practical needs in urban management, transportation, public security, agriculture, industrial manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, and education.

Reiterating the Prime Minister's direction that commercial viability must be the benchmark for strategic technology products, Phuong said several domestic enterprises already possess the capabilities and are prepared to participate in these projects, with existing markets and clearly identified application opportunities.

However, he noted that strategic technology is a new and highly complex field involving multiple sectors, making the active involvement of leaders of ministries, ministerial-level agencies, and local authorities essential.

He also stressed that science and technology in general and strategic technology research and development in particular are long-term, challenging endeavours closely linked to national self-reliance and competitiveness. Therefore, highly sophisticated technologies such as satellite technology, high-speed rail, and rare earth-related technologies require comprehensive research and development efforts supported by clear roadmaps by 2026 and 2030.

"We cannot expect every strategic technology to deliver concrete results as early as 2026," Phuong said.

He expressed confidence that with strong leadership from the Party and the State, together with the determination of ministries, sectors, and localities, Vietnam will achieve important initial milestones in strategic technology development within this year./.

VNA

See more

The smart medical kiosk system at Hop Luc General Hospital in Thanh Hoa province makes it easier for patients to access medical examination and treatment services. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam’s digital overhaul starts to deliver: French newswire

Inforadar noted that Vietnam has progressively streamlined its regulatory framework to clear institutional bottlenecks while putting in place mechanisms designed to spur innovation and technology adoption. The process has also pivoted from a resource-heavy approach to one focused on practical results, with stricter monitoring of projects’ progress.

Visitors experience an e-book app (Photo: VNA)

Verified subscriber data builds stronger digital shield

As Vietnam accelerates its national digital transformation, every correctly verified mobile subscription builds a more comprehensive and reliable telecom database, laying the groundwork for secure, sustainable digital services and public confidence in the country’s digital ecosystem.

A banana plantation cultivated to standardised production practices by Hung Son High-Tech Agriculture JSC in An Phu ward, Gia Lai province. (Photo: VNA)

Crop breeding innovation key to boosting agricultural productivity

According to the Plant Production and Protection Department under the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment, improved crop varieties have increased yields by 8–15%, depending on the crop, while enhancing farmers' incomes and supporting the restructuring of the agricultural sector.

A 3D mapping light show projected onto Turtle Tower, combined with a water screen system. (Photo: VNA)

Smart tourism takes hold nationwide

Under the country’s 2026–2030 digital economy and digital society development programme, the sector has been identified as one of the priority ones for accelerating digital transformation to improve governance efficiency, service quality, and visitor experiences.

Delegates at the launch ceremony of the Vietnam National Multi-Project Wafer Coordination Centre (VNMPW/CC) on June 26. (Photo: VNA)

First national semiconductor chip prototyping support centre makes debut

Vietnam's semiconductor ecosystem now comprises around 60 chip design companies, some 7,000 chip design engineers and 166 universities offering semiconductor-related training programmes. Initial registrations from 12 organisations indicate demand for the prototyping of approximately 30,000 chips.

Minister of Science and Technology Vu Hai Quan speaks at the forum (Photo: nhandan.vn)

Vietnam redefines growth through strategic technologies: Forum

Vietnam should stop simply using technology and start truly mastering artificial intelligence (AI), semiconductors, clean energy and advanced materials; swap a resource-driven economy for one fired by innovation, knowledge and talent; and ditch cheap labour as its main calling card in favour of real technological competitiveness that lifts the country into higher-value global supply chains.

A product showcased at the AI Day 2026 (Photo: VNA)

Identifying right competitive advantages key to breaking through in AI era: Expert

Vietnam should develop a “borderless national intellectual network”, enabling Vietnamese professionals living abroad to contribute as visiting professors, strategic advisers, research leaders or co-directors of key laboratories. Such a model would help tap into global expertise without requiring specialists to return home permanently., according to Assoc. Prof., Dr Nguyen Thanh Phuong of the Department of Information Engineering, Computer Science and Mathematics (DISIM) at the University of L’Aquila in Italy.

Robots handle cargo loading and unloading, helping reduce labour intensity and boost productivity (Photo: VNA)

Flexible policies key to unlocking Vietnam’s strategic technology ambitions: expert

According to Assoc. Prof. Dr. Tran Le Hung from Gustave Eiffel University (France), many countries have invested heavily in cutting-edge technologies but have failed to achieve expected results. The main constraints, he said, are often not capital or human resources, but regulatory bottlenecks, policy policies and implementation mechanisms.

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung chairs the meeting in Hanoi on June 23. (Photo: VNA)

Investment should prioritise strategic technologies: Deputy PM

Under the draft project, research infrastructure development will align with Vietnam’s science, technology and innovation strategy, focusing on strategic technologies. The system will follow a unified three-tier model, prioritising the upgrading, integration and shared use of existing facilities, while ensuring operational efficiency, accountability, data security, intellectual property protection and national interests.