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Great opportunities for Vietnam to develop semiconductor industry, AI

Vietnam is seeing great opportunities to turn the semiconductor industry into a critical national one in the next 30-50 years.
Great opportunities for Vietnam to develop semiconductor industry, AI ảnh 1Illustrative photo (Photo: cafef.vn)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam is seeing greatopportunities to turn the semiconductor industry into a critical national one in the next 30-50 years.

Minister of Planning and Investment Nguyen Chi Dung saidthat Vietnam has advantages in developing its semiconductor industry,particularly its human resources.

Jensen Huang, President and CEO of the US chip giant Nvidia,during his recent visit to Vietnam, highly valued Vietnam's potential, greatopportunities, and clear strategy, vision and approach, as well as its focus oninfrastructure investment in semiconductors and artificial intelligence (AI),and human resources in the spheres.

He said Nvidia wishes to establish a base in Vietnam asit views the Southeast Asian nation its home.

According to the official, Vietnam has a goodeducation system and infrastructure. Once the country’s new generation entersthe AI sector and overseas Vietnamese experts return home, Vietnam will havemany more advantages.

Nvidia is willing to support Vietnam to increase capacityand infrastructure in AI.

Meanwhile, Vietnam is committed to creating favourableconditions for Nvidia to operate in Vietnam, Dung said, calling on Nvidia to boost semiconductor andAI research and projects in Vietnam.

He proposed Nvidia go together with Vietnam in buildingincubation for semiconductor enterprises and supporting it to form supportingenterprises.

Great opportunities for Vietnam to develop semiconductor industry, AI ảnh 2Vietnam is seeing great opportunities to turn the semiconductor industry into a critical national sector in the next 30-50 years. (Photo: tapchitaichinh.vn)

The global semiconductor industry revenue reached nearly600 billion USD in 2022. Global chip demand is expected to increase sharply in2024 and semiconductor chip sales are estimated to reach 1 trillion USD in 2030.

Speaking at the National Forum onDigital Enterprises Development 2023 (VFTE 2023) held early this week, Minister of Informationand Communications Nguyen Manh Hung stressed that 2024 will be thefirst year Vietnam adopts the National Strategy on Semiconductor IndustryGrowth.

"The semiconductor industry is a foundationalsector and, more importantly, a critical national industry for the next 30-50years," he said.

Developing the semiconductor industry also bringsopportunities for Vietnam to reform its electronics industry, especially when ittransitions to AI and IoT-enabled electronic devices.

Nguyen Van Khoa, CEO of FPT Corporation, said that fromthe beginning of this year, major world electronics companies have pouredinvestment into building facilities for hi-tech electronic production inVietnam. 

Vietnam’s semiconductor market is expected to grow byaround 6.7% during 2023-28, reaching 1.94 billion USD. The country should focuson design, packaging and testing in the short term, production in the mediumterm, and mastering core technology in the long term, Khoa suggested./.

VNA

The workshop aims to achieve three key objectives providing a platform for academic exchange and strengthening collaboration between leading international scientists and young researchers, including doctoral students; promoting multidimensional scientific dialogue on major open questions in the field; and initiating new directions for international research cooperation with the active participation of Vietnam's physics community.

With the bilateral relations continuing to grow and the determination of both sides to advance innovation, cooperation in AI and high technology is expected to become one of the most dynamic pillars of Vietnam-Singapore relations in the coming time.

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After four editions of the Top Industry 4.0, this year, the programme was officially renamed “Vietnam I4 Impact Awards”, which is not just a change in name but a shift in development thinking and core values.

Experts said close coordination among State management agencies, research institutes, universities, and businesses will improve training quality and serve the dual goals of quality education and practical research application.

To promote copyright protection, Vietnam is accelerating efforts to master core technologies and build integrated platforms capable of receiving, processing, distributing and protecting digital content on a unified system.

OVs hope the two countries can establish an interconnected cooperation mechanism in the technology supply chain, from sharing research, testing, and development infrastructure to training human resources, thereby forming a technology alliance able to compete with others in the ASEAN region and the world.

Part of the Vietnam Innovation Challenge 2026, the programme goes beyond conventional coding competitions by requiring participants to develop AI-driven solutions to business challenges in real time.

Many experts in Singapore expressed their hope that the General Secretary and President’s visit will pave the way for more substantive cooperation mechanisms between Vietnam and Singapore in high technology, innovation and human resources development.

Ho Chi Minh City currently hosts 143 science and technology enterprises, accounting for around 20% of the national total. Total factor productivity (TFP) contributes 59% to the city’s GRDP growth, with science and technology responsible for 74% of TFP growth.

Over recent years, NSTDA has built strong partnerships with Vietnamese research institutes and organisations in agriculture, biotechnology, energy and sustainable development. Notable examples include joint projects on cassava value chains, salt-tolerant rice, biotechnology products and an initiative on green energy cooperation and development in the Mekong basin.

Vietnam now needs more effective digital transformation to create higher productivity, new growth models and stronger competitiveness in the AI era, said participants at the plenary session of the Vietnam-Asia DX Summit 2026.

The project aims to transform VNeID into a modern, secure and highly scalable national digital platform capable of effectively serving citizens, businesses, agencies and organisations in handling administrative procedures, accessing online public services, conducting electronic transactions and using digital utilities.

More than just a major technology competition for engineering students, this year’s event provides a platform for innovation, artificial intelligence (AI) and practical industrial applications to converge.

Regional Representative of the UNODC for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Delphine Schantz, recommended that countries should treat the UN Convention against Cybercrime (Hanoi Convention) as a ‘starting point,’ instead of an ‘end goal.’

The inclusion of Vietnamese researchers in the 2026 Asian Scientist 100 list alongside Nobel laureates highlights Vietnam’s increasing integration into the global scientific community and its expanding research capabilities.

For Ho Chi Minh City, science, technology and innovation have been identified as key drivers of growth in the new development period. Biotechnology, therefore, is considered one of the sectors capable of generating high added value and promoting the transition towards a greener growth model.

Addressing the forum, Vietnamese Ambassador Tran Phuoc Anh expressed appreciation for the initiative to connect Vietnamese intellectuals in Singapore and make the most of the city-state’s strengths in science, technology and innovation.

Experiences from localities nationwide show that Resolution 57 is fostering a marked transformation in development mindset. Science and technology, innovation and digital transformation are increasingly becoming foundational drivers of economic growth and opening new development space for localities in the years ahead.

Vietnamese authorities handled more than 30 cases involving the illegal sale and theft of personal data between 2023 and 2025, affecting over 160 million data records across sectors including health, education, finance, banking and telecommunications.