Decision to give boost to hydro-meteorological development

Deputy Prime Minister Le Van Thanh has signed a decision on the issuance of a plan to implement the Party Central Committee Secretariat’s Directive No. 10-CT/TW dated September 25, 2021 on strengthening the Party’s leadership in hydro-meteorological work, meeting the requirements of the national construction and defence.

In the decision, the Deputy PM assigned relevant ministries, sectors and localities to conduct six key tasks.

The tasks include the promotion of communications and education to raise public awareness of the efficiency of hydro-meteorological data, the modernisation of monitoring and information collection, and improvements to hydro-meteorological forecasting.

Related legal and policy systems, along with the effectiveness of State management in the field are also required, with sci-tech application and international cooperation.

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment has been put in charge of these efforts and coordinate with the Ministry of Information and Communications and others to step up digital transformation in the sector, as well as build a centralised national hydro-meteorological database and a national database on natural disaster prevention and control.

The Deputy PM also requested relevant ministries, branches and localities to strengthen inspections and promptly handle violations./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Innovation attracts large venture capital

This year will be pivotal for the next stage of development of innovative enterprises and Vietnam’s digital economy to attract investment capital.

The Vietnam National Innovation Centre (NIC) and the venture capital firm Do Ventures Vietnam jointly released the Vietnam Innovation and Tech Investment Report on April 21.

This is the second year that the Vietnam Innovation and Technology Investment Report has been released.

Speaking at the ceremony, Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment (MPI) Tran Duy Dong said innovation was an inevitable trend not only in Vietnam but also around the world.

In recent years, Vietnam had made drastic changes in mechanisms and policies for innovation, which is reflected in the Global Innovation Ranking (GII), where the country moved from 52nd place out of 141 countries and economies in 2015 to 44 out of 132 last year, holding the number one position in the group of 29 countries with the same income level.

Last year the economy faced many difficulties because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it was also a record year for venture investment in Vietnam with a total investment of 1.4 billion USD, an increase of 1.5 times compared to the previous record at 874 million USD in 2019, with the appearance of two new technology “unicorns” Momo and Sky Mavis.

NIC reported that the total number of investment funds participating in Vietnam increased by 60 per cent, evenly distributed among countries.

Among them, the country with the most active investors last year was Singapore, followed by Vietnam and the US.

Investment activities from Japan into Vietnam are also gradually becoming more active after two years of slowing down.

Total transactions of deals over 10 million USD exceeded 1 billion USD, up 255 percent over the previous year.

While the capital inflow into the seed round increased to a record high in both volume and value of the deal, the capital inflow into the rounds after series A has returned to pre-COVID-19 levels.

In particular, last year saw the appearance of five transactions worth over 100 million USD in the fields of payment, e-commerce and gaming.

With a large number of potential early-stage companies and a favourable business environment thanks to the close support of the Government, Vietnam’s commercial ecosystem is ready to enter a more mature stage.

Le Hoang Uyen Vy, CEO of Do Ventures, said that the e-commerce and start-up ecosystem in Vietnam had made impressive recovery steps last year thanks to the persistence of businesses, as well as timely support from the Government.

“With the current momentum of development, I believe that Vietnamese founders will continue to achieve success and make Vietnam a remarkable technology hub in the region,” said Vy.

Deputy Minister Tran Duy Dong also affirmed that the domestic innovation and start-up ecosystem has recovered and reached a new height.

“This is good news and contributes to promote the growth of Vietnam’s digital economy, a positive sign that we are on track to complete the target group of a digital economy that will contribute 30 percent of GDP by 2030,” said Dong./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Visitors to Thailand no longer required to undergo testing upon arrival from May

Fully vaccinated visitors to Thailand will no longer be required to take RT-PCR tests upon arrival as from May 1, the country’s Centre for COVID-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) announced on April 22.

They are still recommended to take a self Antigen Test Kit (ATK), or as Rapid Antigen Test, on the fifth day of their arrival.

Since the beginning of April, foreign visitors and Thai nationals returning from abroad did not need to take RT-PCR tests before departing, but they still need to undergo this test upon arrival, including those who have been fully vaccinated.

After chairing the CCSA meeting, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha said Thailand’s tourism sector is recovering, and rapid antigen test will be more convenient and faster for foreign visitors.

“Many countries are relaxing travel restrictions significantly and our country depends considerably on tourism to support our economy,” the prime minister said.

CCSA spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin later said that also from May 1 there would be no Test & Go entry scheme. The government would have different measures for vaccinated and unvaccinated foreign arrivals by air.

The CCSA also announced several other changes to pandemic prevention requirements for arrivals the same day, including reducing the required insurance coverage to 10,000 USD and granting entry to unvaccinated visitors, providing they show a negative pre-departure PCR result.

On April 22 morning, Thailand reported 21,808 new cases of COVID and 128 related deaths in the previous 24 hours, raising the national caseload to 4,128,038 and total fatalities to 27,520.

As of April 21, the country had administered 132.09 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine, with 80.6 percent of the population receiving one shot, 73.1 percent two shots and 36.2 percent booster shots./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency