Published: 17:12, January 23, 2024 | Updated: 17:45, January 23, 2024
Vietnam visit: German president, firms eye labor, investment deals
By Reuters

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier holds talks with the French President (not in photograph) at the Bellevue presidential palace in Berlin, Germany, on Jan 22, 2024. Steinmeier is leading a German business delegation, including top firms for tunnel machines, wind farms and industrial supplies to visit Vietnam. (PHOTO / AFP)

HANOI - A German business delegation, including top firms for tunnel machines, wind farms and industrial supplies, is joining President Frank-Walter Steinmeier in a visit to Vietnam starting on Tuesday.

German companies have invested over $3 billion in the Southeast Asian manufacturing hub, with automotive giant Bosch being the main investor, according to the German chamber of commerce in Vietnam, which sees the country as an important partner.

During the visit, Steinmeier and German Labor Minister Hubertus Heil are expected to sign with their Vietnamese counterparts a memorandum of understanding on skilled labor mobility to facilitate transfers of Vietnamese workers to Germany.

During the visit, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and German Labor Minister Hubertus Heil are expected to sign with their Vietnamese counterparts a memorandum of understanding on skilled labor mobility to facilitate transfers of Vietnamese workers to Germany

Among companies participating in the business mission is Herrenknecht, which dominates the global market for tunnel boring machines. It is already selling tools for the building of the metro in Ho Chi Minh City, amid Vietnam's plans to expand its railway and metro systems.

Wind farm developer PNE AG is also part of the delegation, possibly trying to tap into Vietnam's planned expansion in the offshore wind sector, despite regulatory delays.

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Building materials multinational Knauf Gips KG and automotive sector's supplier Tesa are among other participants. Both already have operations in Vietnam.

Florian Feyerabend, the representative in Vietnam for Germany's Konrad Adenauer Foundation, a think tank, said the expected labor agreement was part of Germany's strategy to recruit skilled workers from abroad, noting that in the 1980s thousands of Vietnamese workers moved to East Germany.

In a sign of Berlin's growing interest in Vietnam, Steinmeier's visit follows a trip to Hanoi by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in November 2022, the first then for a German leader in more than decade.

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After meetings with leaders in Hanoi, Steinmeier will visit Ho Chi Minh City, the country's business hub, on Wednesday.