Some major businesses from Denmark and Norway have expressed an interest in developing offshore wind power in Vietnam during recent meetings with officials of the Ministry of Industry and Trade.

At the 26th UN Conference on Climate Change (COP26) held in the UK last November, Vietnam committed to achieve net zero emissions by 2050.

Talking to Danish charge d’affaires Troels Jakobsen and Orsted group executive vice-president and CEO Martin Neubert last week, minister Nguyen Hong Dien said offshore wind power development was highly significant since it could be combined with the realisation of socio-economic growth, energy security, and industrialisation targets towards low-carbon emissions and net zero emissions by 2050.

He expressed his hope that Orsted, which is the world’s biggest offshore wind power developer, would share its experience in this field so as to help Vietnam carry out effective energy transition projects that suit local development demand.

Neubert said his group viewed Vietnam as a new and also important market. It opened an office in the country in December 2020 with the hope of making more concrete contributions to the formation of an offshore wind power industry in the country.

The firm was building a plan on launching the industry in Vietnam through two projects it was implementing in coordination with T&T Group, he went on, noting that through its concrete activities and objectives, Orsted hopes to accompany the Vietnamese government during the realisation of the COP26 commitments.

Equinor, a large energy business of Norway, also showed its attention to the local sector.

Addressing a working session with deputy minister Dang Hoang An, an Equinor official said it had opened a representative office in Hanoi, which affirmed Norway’s readiness and determination to contribute to Vietnam’s offshore wind power development, green transition, and implementation of the commitments in the Paris Agreement on climate change and at COP26.

Equinor recently cooperated with the industry ministry to study the development of an offshore wind power supply chain. This study’s results were handed over to the ministry in October.

In March 2021, it also signed a memorandum of understanding with the Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) to assess the feasibility of cooperation in developing offshore wind power and renewable energy.

In the draft National Power Development Plan VIII, Vietnam looks to develop 16,121MW of onshore and inshore wind power, along with about 7,000MW of offshore by 2030. Wind power is set to make up 15.8 per cent of the capacity of the electricity generation system, including 4.8 per cent from offshore wind power.

VIET NAM NEWS/ASIA NEWS NETWORK