Berliner Boersenzeitung - Vietnam's power crisis hits local firms, foreign investors

EUR -
AED 4.227897
AFN 71.941455
ALL 96.142194
AMD 435.664628
ANG 2.060395
AOA 1055.678859
ARS 1606.487992
AUD 1.62654
AWG 2.073656
AZN 1.949564
BAM 1.955641
BBD 2.327311
BDT 141.788488
BGN 1.896822
BHD 0.434659
BIF 3430.176806
BMD 1.151232
BND 1.473061
BOB 7.984352
BRL 6.041158
BSD 1.155506
BTN 106.441358
BWP 15.576735
BYN 3.406623
BYR 22564.137987
BZD 2.324011
CAD 1.570568
CDF 2507.381963
CHF 0.904291
CLF 0.026712
CLP 1054.757873
CNY 7.907779
CNH 7.922349
COP 4255.158956
CRC 544.646317
CUC 1.151232
CUP 30.507636
CVE 110.256048
CZK 24.437763
DJF 205.773293
DKK 7.471837
DOP 70.583043
DZD 152.142208
EGP 60.24821
ERN 17.268473
ETB 180.367556
FJD 2.546466
FKP 0.858925
GBP 0.863021
GEL 3.12562
GGP 0.858925
GHS 12.519983
GIP 0.858925
GMD 84.039699
GNF 10130.045538
GTQ 8.860281
GYD 241.750372
HKD 9.010367
HNL 30.587118
HRK 7.536422
HTG 151.355739
HUF 392.247514
IDR 19457.194334
ILS 3.606475
IMP 0.858925
INR 106.524777
IQD 1513.777094
IRR 1521669.056075
ISK 144.398603
JEP 0.858925
JMD 180.855316
JOD 0.816262
JPY 183.448737
KES 149.23451
KGS 100.675668
KHR 4622.194298
KMF 492.726978
KPW 1036.146593
KRW 1699.655113
KWD 0.353544
KYD 0.962922
KZT 565.614077
LAK 24754.990108
LBP 103477.798495
LKR 359.250832
LRD 211.462831
LSL 19.08895
LTL 3.399288
LVL 0.696368
LYD 7.375305
MAD 10.828721
MDL 20.065371
MGA 4789.548724
MKD 61.639995
MMK 2417.609452
MNT 4110.061302
MOP 9.315244
MRU 45.920474
MUR 52.853257
MVR 17.798291
MWK 2003.711209
MXN 20.563643
MYR 4.520309
MZN 73.576936
NAD 19.08895
NGN 1605.990516
NIO 42.525993
NOK 11.183091
NPR 170.306173
NZD 1.966286
OMR 0.442642
PAB 1.155506
PEN 3.970025
PGK 4.952018
PHP 68.411989
PKR 322.793486
PLN 4.266573
PYG 7481.392575
QAR 4.191922
RON 5.094425
RSD 117.432538
RUB 91.517149
RWF 1689.362838
SAR 4.320131
SBD 9.269325
SCR 16.08079
SDG 691.890526
SEK 10.769784
SGD 1.471389
SHP 0.863722
SLE 28.319361
SLL 24140.748819
SOS 659.246475
SRD 43.01749
STD 23828.168342
STN 24.497692
SVC 10.111179
SYP 127.645489
SZL 19.094201
THB 37.058404
TJS 11.075801
TMT 4.040823
TND 3.362756
TOP 2.77189
TRY 50.820314
TTD 7.841363
TWD 36.698731
TZS 3001.658915
UAH 51.164646
UGX 4325.648795
USD 1.151232
UYU 46.206248
UZS 14022.861465
VES 507.019001
VND 30248.608449
VUV 137.685131
WST 3.12493
XAF 655.895201
XAG 0.01373
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.111261
XCG 2.082531
XDR 0.815734
XOF 655.903746
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.626303
ZAR 19.33818
ZMK 10362.464165
ZMW 22.445885
ZWL 370.696083
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -2.2800

    69.62

    -3.27%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    25.68

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.14

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.5800

    34.18

    -1.7%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.1

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.82

    -0.23%

  • NGG

    1.1200

    90.81

    +1.23%

  • RIO

    -1.3800

    90.7

    -1.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.95

    -3.24%

  • GSK

    -0.8700

    54.28

    -1.6%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.31

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -0.8100

    192.5

    -0.42%

  • BTI

    0.7300

    59.89

    +1.22%

  • BP

    0.6000

    42.16

    +1.42%

Vietnam's power crisis hits local firms, foreign investors
Vietnam's power crisis hits local firms, foreign investors / Photo: Nhac NGUYEN - AFP

Vietnam's power crisis hits local firms, foreign investors

An intensely hot summer and unprecedented drought are straining energy supplies in northern Vietnam, prompting rolling blackouts and sudden power outages that have led to "uncountable" losses among local firms and foreign manufacturers.

Text size:

Vietnam is a crucial part of the supply chain for some of the world's most important companies, and many of them -- including Samsung and Apple supplier Foxconn -- have factories in the north, not far from the capital Hanoi.

Operations at a large number of factories have been badly impacted by the lengthy power outages, business leaders told AFP. Some were given very little notice or had no warning at all.

"We had a 26-hour power cut. It cost us tens of thousands of dollars that day. It's not nice at all," said Vu Chi Hieu, director of Vietnam's KingBill XNK Joint Stock Company that produces aluminium parts in Bac Ninh province, which neighbours Hanoi.

Last week, several northern areas -- many of them home to key industrial parks -- were told to cut their energy use in half, forcing the Japanese, Korean and European chambers of commerce to petition the government to find a quick solution to the crisis.

Susumu Yoshida from Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry told AFP that direct damage from one single power outage affecting five manufacturers at an industrial park was over $190,000.

"Total damage among IPs (industrial parks) in northern Vietnam seems to be an unaccountable amount," he said.

The Southeast Asian nation has struggled with a series of heatwaves since early May when the mercury reached a record high, while rivers and reservoirs at hydroelectric power plants have dried up.

Vietnam relies on hydropower for almost half its energy needs but 11 big plants in the north and central regions have had their power generation severely interrupted in recent weeks.

Two out of three units at one of the biggest in Vietnam, Thac Ba, have stopped functioning.

At the same time, as the use of air conditioners and electric fans surged, there has been "a 20 percent increase in demand on the network", National Load Dispatch Centre deputy director Nguyen Quoc Trung said.

"The power shortage has been and will be intense in the north," until early July, Trung warned at a roundtable discussion in Hanoi late last week.

Trung's boss, Nguyen Duc Ninh, was suspended Wednesday pending an investigation into the outages.

- Bad image -

In the port city of Hai Phong, several associations representing Vietnam's logistics and shipping industries -- which rely on a digital network to coordinate deliveries and need power to operate loading equipment and keep trucks cool -- filed complaints to state electricity company EVN.

For each power cut lasting over six hours, companies may have to compensate waiting vessels, which pay a docking fee of up to $50,000 and also face fines themselves for a delay in delivery of the goods, the associations said in a public statement.

South Korea -- Vietnam's top foreign investor -- also complained that power cuts two or three times a week "had badly affected production activities".

"The power cut issue will be very serious for not only firms who have already invested in Vietnam, but also for us trying to call for investors to come to Vietnam," Hong Sun, chairman of the Korean Chamber of Business in Vietnam, told AFP.

Other investors agreed that the blackouts -- along with an increasingly dark capital city that has turned off many street lights -- are not a good look for Vietnam.

"We have seen this issue raised both by clients operating in Vietnam and those clients seeking to invest, especially investment in the power sector," said Kevin Hawkins, a partner at DFDL law firm in Ho Chi Minh City who specialises in energy.

"It is concerning and (they) question whether this is a short-term issue or a continuing problem."

- 'Slowly dying' -

A recent government target to reduce energy consumption by two percent per year until 2025 suggests the issue may persist.

Vietnam has also made an ambitious pledge to shift away from coal-fired power by 2050 as part of efforts to counter climate change.

Demand for electricity in fast-growing Vietnam is increasing by more than eight percent per year on average, according to an official statement in early June.

Power saving is therefore "an important and urgent solution to maintain energy security and sustainable development," the government said.

Thibaut Giroux, chairman of the French Chamber of Commerce and Industry and CEO of steel parts producer Stolz-Miras, told AFP his factory received a request to reduce average daily consumption by 10 percent from now to 2025, even though their facility is stationed in southern Dong Nai province.

"(To comply) I would have to reduce production, because basically what is consuming power is my production machinery," said Giroux, who provides parts for giants such as Nestle, Unilever and Bayer.

"If I do that I'm slowly dying."

If no solution is found, Japan's chamber of commerce warned in a letter to authorities that "some member companies... may even think of shifting their production facilities" out of Vietnam.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)