Nam Dinh seeks cooperation opportunities with German partners
VOV.VN - A delegation from the northern province of Nam Dinh led by Pham Gia Tuc, secretary of the provincial Party Committee, held a working session on October 24 with the German Association for Small- and Medium-sized Businesses (BVMW).
The working session is part of their investment promotion trip to the European country, with the aim of exploring possibilities in connection and co-operation with German firms.
Speaking at the session, Andreas Jahn, member of the BVMW Federal Executive Board in charge of politics and foreign trade, said he has high hopes of building further ties between German enterprises and Nam Dinh, which is among the 10 localities with highest per capita income in the country.
He noted that BVMW already has a rep office in the nation and has asked Nam Dinh’s authorities to consider the opening of the association's second office in Nam Dinh as a means of facilitating greater exchanges and co-operation between the two sides.
For his part, Tuc introduced the province’s potential, advantages, and investment incentives, noting that the locality has attracted many investors in renewable energy, manufacturing, electronics, and computers.
He said the province is keen to bolster win-win co-operation with German SMEs in promoting hi-tech industries, the green economy, and the circular economy.
The official therefore asked BVMW to help with promoting investment opportunities in Nam Dinh to its member firms, for example publishing information about Nam Dinh on its official website. He therefore invited the association's leaders to visit the province for more discussions on building bilateral ties.
Previously, the delegation visited some high-tech manufacturing facilities and the Vietnamese Embassy in Germany.
The first eight months of the year saw Nam Dinh welcome an array of major investments, including a US$120 million computer production project from Qanta Computer Group of Taiwan (China) with a planned capacity of 4.5 million units a year, a US$100 million project to build a high-tech polymer coating factory by Sunrise Material Group of Singapore, and a US$100 million project of JiaWei Group Taiwan (China) to make high-tech household appliances.