Vietnam–Japan relations built on sincerity, affection, trust and mutual benefit: PM

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh called on Japanese prefectures and enterprises to continue trusting and supporting Vietnam on its development journey, contributing to the prosperity of both nations and their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh speaks at the Vietnam-Japan Local Cooperation Forum in Quang Ninh. (Photo: VNA)
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh speaks at the Vietnam-Japan Local Cooperation Forum in Quang Ninh. (Photo: VNA)

Quang Ninh (VNA) – Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on November 25 attended the Vietnam–Japan local cooperation forum held in Quang Ninh province, where he called on Japanese prefectures and enterprises to continue trusting and supporting Vietnam on its development journey, contributing to the prosperity of both nations and their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

The event brought together leaders and representatives of nearly 50 localities from both countries, alongside ministries, agencies, businesses and experts. Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi sent a congratulatory message to the forum.

Since the establishment of diplomatic relations 50 years ago, and especially since the elevation of bilateral ties to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2023, Vietnam–Japan relations have been thriving. To date, over 110 cooperation agreements have been signed by the two sides’ localities, creating an important foundation for deepening the relations.

The forum aims to materialise the key areas agreed upon by the two countries’ high-ranking leaders, and establish regular dialogue and connectivity mechanisms, helping deepen exchanges, share experience, and advance substantive cooperation that delivers balanced benefits for both sides.

vna-potal-thu-tuong-du-dien-dan-hop-tac-dia-phuong-viet-nam-nhat-ban-8431055.jpg
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and delegates who attend the Vietnam-Japan Local Cooperation Forum in Quang Ninh province. (Photo: VNA)

In his remarks, PM Chinh conveyed greetings from Party General Secretary To Lam and extended a warm welcome to all delegates. He stressed that the forum reflects the shared spirit of “unity for strength, cooperation for mutual benefit, and dialogue for trust.”

The PM affirmed that local-to-local and business-to-business cooperation has become a hallmark of Vietnam–Japan relations, serving as a practical channel to translate high-level agreements into concrete agreements and projects. Japan remains one of Vietnam’s most important economic partners, its top provider of ODA and partner in labour cooperation, the third-largest investor, and the fourth-largest trading and tourism partner.

Since the upgrade to the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, cooperation has expanded to new areas such as digital transformation, green transition, circular economy and creative economy. Innovation and science–technology have emerged as new pillars, opening broader space for joint development.

Briefing delegates on Vietnam’s socio-economic achievements, PM Chinh noted that after nearly 80 years of nation-building and 40 years of Doi Moi (Renewal), Vietnam has transformed itself from a war-ravaged and isolated country into one of the world’s top 35 economies, and among the 20 nations with the largest trade scale. It has signed 17 FTAs with 60 partners and maintained diplomatic ties with 194 countries. Per capita GDP has increased 50-fold; macro-economic stability, social order and national defence-security have been maintained; and people’s living standards have improved.

Stepping into a new development era, Vietnam is committed to addressing bottlenecks in institutions, human resources and infrastructure; mobilising all resources; and accelerating economic restructuring with science-technology, digital transformation and innovation as major drivers. The country aims for double-digit growth from 2026 and strives to become a high-income developed nation by 2045.

Highlighting the vast potential for stronger Vietnam–Japan cooperation, PM Chinh outlined several key directions.

He said localities should proactively leverage their complementary strengths and needs on the basis of mutual benefit. Many Vietnamese provinces seek capital, technology and supporting industries, while many Japanese prefectures face labour shortages, ageing populations and the need for new growth drivers.

The PM emphasised placing enterprises and people at the centre, taking them as the main actors and beneficiaries of cooperation. He urged localities to focus on policies that create favourable conditions for businesses to connect and invest, ensuring that people benefit from “better jobs, higher incomes and better skills.”

Cultural and people-to-people exchanges must remain a long-term foundation, the leader said, encouraging both sides to propose specific initiatives to enhance cultural connectivity, tourism cooperation and mutual understanding between localities.

He held that innovation and digital transformation should be developed as new growth engines, and called for cooperation in digital technology, AI, smart cities, start-up incubation, and R&D centres. He expressed hope that Japan will share experience and support Vietnamese localities and businesses in building innovation ecosystems, digital governance capacity and policies for priority sectors such as AI, mobile infrastructure and semiconductors.

According to the PM, green transition and climate adaptation must be stepped up. He proposed cooperation projects in green infrastructure, urban flood prevention, waste and wastewater treatment, climate-smart agriculture and renewable energy.

The PM welcomed the statement of newly elected Japanese PM Takaichi - “Work! Work! Work! And Work!” - and reaffirmed Vietnam’s readiness to accompany Japanese localities and investors.

PM Chinh called on Japanese localities and enterprises to maintain their confidence in Vietnam and continue deepening cooperation, contributing to shared prosperity and the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. He expressed his belief that the first Vietnam - Japan local cooperation forum will become an important milestone and a “new catalyst” for future collaboration - aligned with the guiding spirit of sincerity, affection, trust, substance, effectiveness and mutual benefits./.

VNA

See more

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung (right) receives Yongsoo Huh, Vice Chairman and CEO of GS Energy. (Photo: chinhphu.vn)

Deputy PM meets GS Energy leader, encourages renewable investment

Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung called on GS Energy to continue working closely with Vietnamese authorities and partners to explore solutions for developing local supply chains, enhance mutually beneficial cooperation and contribute to the sustainable development of both countries.

Party General Secretary To Lam speaks at the meeting with representatives of more than 40 international corporations from the Asia Business Council in Hanoi on March 26 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam pledges partnership to develop resilient, green supply chains: Party leader

Party General Secretary To Lam affirmed that Vietnam will continue to encourage domestic enterprises to expand partnerships with foreign investors, while directing legislative, executive and judicial bodies, along with agencies in the political system, to create the best possible conditions for businesses to grow, enhance international cooperation, and move up global value chains.

Nguyen Tuan Anh, Deputy Secretary of the municipal Party Committee, holds a working session with a consortium of China Harbour Engineering Company (Vietnam) and Shenzhen Energy Group on March 26, 2026. (Photo: VNA)

Can Tho city courts global investors to accelerate energy ambitions

Rising interest from major global players underscores Can Tho city’s growing appeal as an investment destination. Clean energy, particularly wind power, has been identified as a strategic pillar to drive socio-economic growth while strengthening energy security across the Mekong Delta.

Visitors savor freshly prepared dishes on-site at the “Discover US Agriculture” programme, held on July 19, 2025 in Ho Chi Minh City. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Vietnam, US work to step up agricultural cooperation

Vietnam has strengths in tropical farm produce, seafood and wooden products, while the US is a major supplier of key inputs such as soybeans, corn, wheat and dairy products. This trade structure creates a balanced supply chain with little direct competition, delivering tangible benefits to businesses and consumers in both countries.

Deputy Prime Minister Tran Hong Ha speaks at the opening ceremony of the Vietbuild Hanoi International Exhibition 2026 on March 26. (Photo: VNA)

Vietbuild Hanoi 2026 International Exhibition opens

The five-day event, themed “Construction – Building Materials – Real Estate – Green Transport”, brings together more than 2,500 booths from domestic and international enterprises, reflecting the development momentum of Vietnam’s construction sector and the broader economy.

An overview of the International Coffee Conference 2026 (Photo: VNA)

Global Coffee Alliance launched to drive sustainable, inclusive growth

The Global Coffee Alliance is envisioned as a public–private partnership that bridges diplomatic efforts with business operations. Looking ahead to 2040, it aims to develop a global coffee ecosystem that is inclusive, technology-driven, and aligned with net-zero emissions goals.

At Dung Quat oil refinery (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam races to restart idle ethanol plants to meet surging demand

Do Van Tuan, Chairman of the Vietnam Biofuels Association, said that monthly ethanol demand for the E10 blend is projected at 92,000–100,000 cu.m. The country’s six ethanol plants have a combined design capacity of roughly 41,000 cu. m per month, but only three are now running, churning out about 25,000 cu.m, or just 25–27% of demand. Even if every plant hits full tilt, local supply would cover only around 41% of national needs.

At a supermarket in Ho Chi Minh City (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City to pilot pork trading on Mercantile Exchange of Vietnam

Nguyen Nguyen Phuong, Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Industry and Trade, said listing pork on the MXV will finally give consumers and firms more stable prices, while slapping on stricter food safety rules and making it easier to track where the meat actually comes from. Farmers, meanwhile, stand to gain from more predictable margins and dodge fewer of the supply-demand imbalances that routinely distort prices.

Processing octopus for export to the Japanese market at Huy Nam Company in An Giang (Photo: VNA)

Squid, octopus exports pick up early in 2026

In terms of product structure, squid has emerged as the main growth driver. Export turnover of squid exceeded 64 million USD, rising nearly 30%, while octopus exports brought in more than 47 million USD, up over 16%. The development indicates that demand for squid products is recovering faster in the short term.

The world’s longest over-sea cable car to Hon Thom Island in the Phu Quoc special zone, An Giang province. (Photo: VNA)

An Giang steps up tourism development ahead of APEC 2027

Tourism in the province has recorded strong growth, affirming its position as one of the region’s leading destinations. Phu Quoc Island continues to attract the majority of international travellers, receiving more than 817,660 visitors, accounting for over 98.5% of total foreign arrivals to the province.

Import-export activities at Lach Huyen international port in Hai Phong (Photo: VNA)

Reducing risks, removing logistics bottlenecks amid Middle East volatility

According to Truong Xuan Trung, Trade Counsellor of Vietnam in the UAE, the Middle East serves not only as a consumption market but also as a key global transhipment hub, meaning instability in the region creates ripple effects across intercontinental transport networks. Shipping route adjustments and airspace restrictions have lengthened transit times, increased costs and disrupted delivery schedules, with some Vietnamese shipments forced to reroute or seek alternative markets.

Cargo is handled at container terminals No. 3 and No. 4 of Hai Phong International Gateway Port. (Photo: VNA)

Businesses seek “survival momentum” amid global geopolitical turbulence

This is an urgent move as the challenges of 2026 differ markedly from previous ones, shaped by overlapping external shocks ranging from geopolitical tensions disrupting supply chains to surging logistics and raw material costs, exchange-rate pressures, and increasingly complex tariff barriers in global markets.

At the 2025 trade connectivity week for mechanical, electrical and digital industries. (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City gives boost to supporting industry firms

Supporting industry firms in Ho Chi Minh City are scrambling to embed themselves more deeply into both global and domestic supply chains, backed by a suite of local incentives that are speeding up their tech upgrades and market access.

Italy's national pavilion at the ongoing Food & Hospitality Vietnam 2026 exhibition at Ho Chi Minh City's Saigon Exhibition and Convention Centre (SECC) draws visitors for hands-on experiences. (Photo: IVNA)

Italian food firms eye opportunities in Vietnam

Italy’s exports of food and beverages to Vietnam reached 105.1 million EUR in 2025, up 4% year-on-year, positioning the country among the leading EU suppliers to the Vietnamese market.