Zürcher Nachrichten - Local, foreign firms facing months of recovery in storm-hit Vietnam

EUR -
AED 4.097406
AFN 77.400559
ALL 99.383558
AMD 432.560822
ANG 2.013475
AOA 1036.906361
ARS 1073.42574
AUD 1.634959
AWG 2.009415
AZN 1.874953
BAM 1.956049
BBD 2.255708
BDT 133.508213
BGN 1.964124
BHD 0.420454
BIF 3237.949872
BMD 1.115567
BND 1.442597
BOB 7.720053
BRL 6.028677
BSD 1.117252
BTN 93.436539
BWP 14.698226
BYN 3.656199
BYR 21865.116772
BZD 2.251897
CAD 1.511052
CDF 3201.677982
CHF 0.945862
CLF 0.037653
CLP 1038.949977
CNY 7.882569
CNH 7.886262
COP 4661.720985
CRC 578.708913
CUC 1.115567
CUP 29.56253
CVE 110.279055
CZK 25.075761
DJF 198.923064
DKK 7.459061
DOP 67.069149
DZD 147.456409
EGP 54.1175
ERN 16.733508
ETB 128.57484
FJD 2.452407
FKP 0.84957
GBP 0.839392
GEL 2.992506
GGP 0.84957
GHS 17.5964
GIP 0.84957
GMD 76.973793
GNF 9653.316876
GTQ 8.636178
GYD 233.663599
HKD 8.694786
HNL 27.713781
HRK 7.584754
HTG 147.230085
HUF 394.395954
IDR 16921.146134
ILS 4.190249
IMP 0.84957
INR 93.324226
IQD 1463.499646
IRR 46970.956117
ISK 152.503695
JEP 0.84957
JMD 175.522371
JOD 0.790603
JPY 159.474235
KES 144.120258
KGS 94.014423
KHR 4534.740564
KMF 493.639946
KPW 1004.009832
KRW 1481.501095
KWD 0.340282
KYD 0.930914
KZT 535.01824
LAK 24669.365319
LBP 100045.447892
LKR 340.076392
LRD 223.413441
LSL 19.465355
LTL 3.29398
LVL 0.674795
LYD 5.321678
MAD 10.834381
MDL 19.4933
MGA 5033.664116
MKD 61.529329
MMK 3623.318692
MNT 3790.697235
MOP 8.967638
MRU 44.224033
MUR 51.171153
MVR 17.123835
MWK 1937.029835
MXN 21.384781
MYR 4.696637
MZN 71.290593
NAD 19.465355
NGN 1829.887108
NIO 41.110633
NOK 11.661944
NPR 149.516397
NZD 1.784261
OMR 0.429437
PAB 1.117252
PEN 4.194272
PGK 4.435565
PHP 62.04563
PKR 310.721888
PLN 4.265299
PYG 8721.189718
QAR 4.073019
RON 4.974358
RSD 117.06988
RUB 103.604552
RWF 1504.423172
SAR 4.186377
SBD 9.282371
SCR 15.069078
SDG 671.011434
SEK 11.317373
SGD 1.44148
SHP 0.84957
SLE 25.487701
SLL 23392.880292
SOS 638.4871
SRD 33.54789
STD 23089.988351
SVC 9.775246
SYP 2802.895941
SZL 19.4483
THB 36.936557
TJS 11.874383
TMT 3.915641
TND 3.383831
TOP 2.621362
TRY 37.957156
TTD 7.593117
TWD 35.657439
TZS 3039.296011
UAH 46.296501
UGX 4148.565935
USD 1.115567
UYU 45.89585
UZS 14232.941614
VEF 4041200.723372
VES 40.965693
VND 27420.64134
VUV 132.442377
WST 3.120758
XAF 656.064141
XAG 0.035763
XAU 0.000431
XCD 3.014876
XDR 0.828013
XOF 656.040614
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.282501
ZAR 19.435913
ZMK 10041.435126
ZMW 29.074575
ZWL 359.212178
  • RBGPF

    3.5000

    60.5

    +5.79%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    25.01

    -0.18%

  • BCC

    5.4350

    142.495

    +3.81%

  • BTI

    -0.2050

    37.675

    -0.54%

  • GSK

    -0.4340

    41.996

    -1.03%

  • SCS

    -1.0200

    13.09

    -7.79%

  • BP

    0.7280

    33.158

    +2.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    6.93

    +5.48%

  • NGG

    -1.3750

    68.675

    -2%

  • RIO

    2.4850

    65.395

    +3.8%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.39

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    -0.1750

    10.055

    -1.74%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    25.08

    +0.4%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    35.44

    -0.48%

  • RELX

    0.6400

    48.01

    +1.33%

  • AZN

    0.5250

    79.105

    +0.66%

Local, foreign firms facing months of recovery in storm-hit Vietnam
Local, foreign firms facing months of recovery in storm-hit Vietnam / Photo: NHAC NGUYEN - AFP

Local, foreign firms facing months of recovery in storm-hit Vietnam

Factory roofs blown off, products worth millions of dollars destroyed, supply chains disrupted: Typhoon Yagi has had a disastrous impact on local and global companies in northern Vietnam who could take months to recover, business leaders warn.

Text size:

The strongest typhoon to hit the country in decades slammed into the important industrial port city of Haiphong before unleashing a torrent of rain across the north, a major production hub for global tech firms such as Samsung and Foxconn.

With climate change making destructive storms like Yagi more likely, the disaster raises questions about Vietnam's push to become an alternative to China in the global supply chain owing to its high susceptibility and lack of mitigating measures.

Dozens of factories and warehouses in Haiphong were damaged by Yagi, while some in neighbouring Quang Ninh province expect to have no power until the end of the week, business leaders told AFP.

"I can guarantee that (the damage) is more than tens of millions of dollars," said Bruno Jaspaert, chief executive of DEEP C Industrial Zones, home to 178 companies across five industrial areas in Haiphong and Quang Ninh.

"At least 85 percent of our customers have sustained damage."

Many companies lost roofs, while another business saw 3,000 square metres (32,300 square foot) of wall panels blown off in gale-force winds, Jaspaert told AFP.

At the Haiphong DEEP C industrial zones, energy consumption was at two thirds of its usual rate, Jaspaert said, and was not expected to return to normal for another two or three months.

Hong Sun, chairman of the Korean Chamber of Business in Vietnam, told AFP the typhoon had been a "disaster" for his members, with some struggling with staff shortages as flooding stopped workers reaching factories.

Samsung -- Vietnam's largest foreign investor -- said its operations were running as normal, but a warehouse belonging to Korean giant LG Electronics was flooded last week, Hong said, damaging fridges and other home appliances.

LG told AFP it had resumed production of some products shortly after the storm and was making "every effort to swifty recover".

- 'China plus one' drive -

Among businesses from Japan, another major investor, around half reported some kind of damage -- while around 70 said their business had been interrupted or suspended, according to Susumu Yoshida at the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Floods and landslides triggered by Yagi have killed more than 500 people across Southeast Asia -- 292 in Vietnam, according to government figures.

The southeast Asian nation of 100 million people has long been seen as a likely key beneficiary of the decoupling between the United States and the world's second-largest economy.

Investors have expanded into the country as part of a "China plus one" strategy and US President Joe Biden made a high-profile state visit to Hanoi a year ago.

Biden symbolically upgraded diplomatic ties and pushed Vietnam as a solid partner for "friendshoring" -- diversifying manufacturing supply chains away from China towards friendly countries.

Executives from tech behemoth Google, chip makers Intel and GlobalFoundries, and aviation giant Boeing joined Biden for investment talks in Hanoi.

But Vietnam is one of the world's most vulnerable countries to human-caused climate change, and without adaptation and mitigation measures, the World Bank estimates it will cost about 12 percent to 14.5 percent of GDP a year by 2050.

A study earlier this year said Southeast Asia -- and Haiphong specifically -- was facing "unprecedented threats" from longer and more intense typhoons because of climate change.

- 'Unprecedented threat' -

Vietnam's communist government has set a target to become a high-income country by 2045, but the World Bank says damage caused by climate change poses a "critical obstacle" to this goal.

Vietnam's government has already said Yagi caused an estimated $1.6 billion in economic losses, and would slow GDP growth in the second half of the year.

But if Vietnam's susceptibility is a worry for investors, most see a lack of climate-safe alternatives.

"Vulnerability due to climate change is subject to any region... (so) it will not affect Japanese investment," said Yoshida.

However, some hope the disaster may incentivise investors to consider renewable energies such as solar that could help shore up supply when storms or floods occur.

Solar and wind power grew tenfold to 13 percent of electricity generation from 2015 to 2023, on par with the global average and exceeding some Southeast Asian peers, according to Ember.

But Vietnam is still heavily reliant on coal, as well as hydropower which is vulnerable in heavy floods.

A shift "would depend on the existing policies for making more solar energy viable", according to Dinita Setyawati, senior electricity policy analyst for Southeast Asia at independent energy think tank Ember.

"These are the opportunities that the Vietnamese government should tap into."

W.Vogt--NZN