Nineteen enterprises awarded for solutions to climate change
Nineteen enterprises have been honoured at an award ceremony on startups focusing on coping with climate change, held in Hanoi by the Ministry of Science and Technology.
Nineteen enterprises have been honoured at an award ceremony on startups focusing on coping with climate change. (Photo: VNA)
Hanoi (VNA)🌃 – Nineteen enterprises have been honoured at an award ceremony on startups focusing on coping with climate change, held in Hanoi by the Ministry of Science and Technology in collaboration with the World Bank.
These are enterprises given financial assistance as well as incubating service from the Vietnam Centre for Innovation and Creativity.
Speaking at the ceremony, Minister of Science and Technology Chu Ngoc Anh stressed that climate change has increasingly drawn the interest of the international community and that Vietnam is considered as one of five countries in the world most heavily affected by climate change.
In the wake of climate change, in recent years the Vietnamese government has been implementing many new institutions, policies and action plans to enhance national capability in response to climate change, it has also been working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve energy efficiency in economic sectors, he said.
In order to help Vietnam cope with climate change, the international community has supported many projects on green growth, and in technical and investment assistance projects to strengthen institutions and infrastructure.
In 2015, the WB provided non-refundable aid sourced from the official development assistance of the Department for International Development ( DFID ) of the United Kingdom and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) of Australia, to create the Vietnam Climate Change Innovation Centre.
𒆙 Through the selection and assessment of more than 300 project entries, the Minister of Science and Technology and experts from the WB selected 19 enterprises with excellent ideas which prove technology’s positive impact on green growth – to develop a low-carbon economy in Vietnam.-VNA
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The World Bank approved a 310 million USD credit on June 11 to help Vietnam build climate resilience and ensure sustainable livelihoods of 1.2 million people living in nine Mekong Delta provinces.
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The networks bring together universities, research institutes and domestic and foreign businesses. Members will work closely in training, research, and technology transfer by sharing curricula, improving faculty capacity, providing access to laboratories and research facilities, and jointly implementing science and technology projects.
The Better Choice Awards (BCA) 2025 is a key highlight in the lead-up to Vietnam Innovation Day that falls on October 1, an annual event expected to attract hundreds of innovative enterprises, research institutions, investment funds, and startups from both Vietnam and abroad.
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The government leader reaffirmed Vietnam’s goal of achieving self-reliance in the design, manufacturing, and test of necessary semiconductor chips by no later than 2027.
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The two-day academic forum, themed “Resilience, Sustainability & Digital Transformation in a Changing World: Perspectives from Southeast Asia”, aims to share interdisciplinary research insights, focusing on adaptive capacity, sustainable development, and digital transformation amid evolving global and regional landscapes.
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Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Chi Dung emphasised that Vietnam has a clear strategy and ambition in this field, and is rapidly emerging as a central hub and key link in the regional and global semiconductor value chains.
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Under the theme “Breakthrough Era with the Development of Industrial Internet”, the event gathered over 400 delegates, including senior officials, leading Internet experts, and technology engineers from Vietnam and abroad.