Want to be in the loop?
subscribe to
our notification
Business News
VIETNAMESE STEELMAKERS FIND GROWTH MOMENTUM DESPITE EXPORT CHALLENGES
According to the Vietnam Steel Association (VSA), crude steel production hit an estimated 14.8 million tonnes in the first half, a 21.2 per cent year-on-year jump, while steel consumption climbed 13.1 per cent to about 17.9 million tonnes, providing a sturdy base for growth.

The Hòa Phát Dung Quất steel factory. — VNA/VNS Photo
HÀ NỘI — Vietnamese steelmakers are contending with a triple blow of mounting trade barriers, tougher green production mandates and persistent global market turbulence.
A manufacturing rebound, public investment-led domestic demand and a drive to sharpen competitiveness are nonetheless giving the industry space to sustain its growth trajectory.
Steel exports have been under pressure since the start of the year as chronic global overcapacity keeps fueling protectionism in key markets.
The US has slapped duties as high as 50 per cent on some steel products under the Trade Expansion Act’s Section 232, while Việt Nam remains a frequent target of trade remedy probes and tighter rules on origin, quality and technical standards.
As a result, Vietnamese mills are now grappling not just with market share erosion but mounting pressure to bolster compliance paperwork, tighten supply chain management and raise their ability to meet customer requirements. Simultaneously, greenhouse gas reduction mandates and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) have become essential for entry into major export markets.
The squeeze is especially acute as steel is among the sectors covered by the European Union’s CBAM. Failing to overhaul production technology, clamp down on emissions and deliver transparent carbon reporting could strip the industry of its competitive edge in its traditional high-value export destinations.
The industry is also exposed to wild swings in imported raw materials such as iron ore and scrap steel. Continued volatility in input costs, freight and exchange rates, and geopolitical risks could materially dent production efficiency and earnings.
Deputy General Director of Vietnam Steel Corporation (VNSteel) Phạm Công Thảo said the 2026 outlook remains positive, propped up by steady domestic demand. VNSteel is targeting aggressive growth while maintaining its industry-leading role and contributing to the country’s double-digit economic expansion goal.
To do that, VNSteel is channeling investment into quality steel products to gradually displace imports, particularly those serving national defence-security and strategic industrial segments where domestic involvement is still thin.
It is also tightening corporate governance and wringing maximum value from internal resources under the Politburo’s Resolution 79-NQ/TW on State-owned economic sector development, while driving targeted investment to lift productivity, quality and business efficiency.
According to the Vietnam Steel Association (VSA), crude steel production hit an estimated 14.8 million tonnes in the first half, a 21.2 per cent year-on-year jump, while steel consumption climbed 13.1 per cent to about 17.9 million tonnes, providing a sturdy base for growth.
Exports, however, totalled just 1.79 million tonnes, down 4.8 per cent from a year earlier, underscoring uneven global demand, fluctuating steel prices and an ever-tightening web of trade restrictions.
Forging a green-fueled expansion
The VSA forecast that Việt Nam's crude steel output could reach 27 million tonnes in 2026, up 10 per cent year-on-year. Finished steel production is projected at 33 million tonnes, with domestic consumption of 28 million tonnes and exports of six million tonnes. Steel imports are expected to decline, signaling an improved domestic production capacity and the growing bite of market management and trade remedy measures.
VSA Chairman Nghiêm Xuân Đa said the industry must fortify the domestic market against cheap, low-quality imports and unfair competition. He called for tighter quality control rules for imported steel, including mandatory compliance with Vietnamese standards before products can reach the domestic market, to level the playing field.
Steelmakers must also fast-track their green transition and digital transformation, pouring capital into energy-efficient technology, resource optimisation and emissions cuts.
At the same time, they need rigorous adherence to rules of origin and greater transparency across raw material sourcing and supply chains to dodge anti-circumvention trade probes and burnish their reputation in export markets.
On the policy front, the State should beef up early warning systems and market forecasting while giving enterprises more firepower to fight trade remedy cases. It must keep upgrading technical standards and steel product regulations and roll out stable, long-term investment policies consistent with Việt Nam’s international commitments.
Speaking at a recent conference on supercharging exports to achieve double-digit growth, Minister of Industry and Trade Lê Mạnh Hùng said the ministry would continue reviewing regulations and consulting enterprises and industry associations to further slash red tape, cut costs and smooth the path for production and trade.
It will redouble efforts to squeeze maximum advantage from free trade agreements, fuel sustainable export growth and reinforce trade remedy early warning for firms.
At the same time, it will work hand-in-hand with ministries and agencies to unpick market obstacles, ignite industrial development, raise localisation rates and build more resilient, self-reliant domestic supply chains, thus sharpening the international competitiveness of Vietnamese goods, he added. — VNA/VNS
Source: VNS
Related News
HUNG YEN BUILDS MOMENTUM FOR DOUBLE-DIGIT GROWTH WITH STRONG H1 PERFORMANCE
Strong industrial output, rising investment and robust trade propelled Hung Yen into Vietnam's top five fastest-growing localities in the first half of 2026, reinforcing confidence in the province's double-digit growth outlook. Accordingly, the Northern province posted regional GDP growth of 10.7 per cent in the first half (H1) of 2026, outperforming its growth target and ranking among Vietnam's five fastest-growing localities.
VIỆT NAM UPGRADES SEAPORT NETWORK TO STRENGTHEN MARITIME COMPETITIVENESS
Hải Phòng City has emerged as one of Việt Nam's key logistics hubs thanks to an integrated transport network combining expressways, an international airport, a planned high-speed railway and a deep-water port capable of handling vessels of more than 200,000 deadweight tonnages (DWT) with direct connections to Europe and the Americas.
KHÁNH HÒA CALLS FOR INVESTMENT IN PORTS, LOGISTICS
At an investment promotion conference held on July 14, Trương Văn Tiến, director of the provincial Investment, Trade and Tourism Promotion Centre highlighted the strategic advantages of the Vân Phong deep-water port and Cà Ná port, saying the facilities would underpin the development of port services, logistics, shipbuilding, energy and other marine-based industries.
VIỆT NAM SEEKS TO EXPAND FRUIT EXPORTS TO CHINA THROUGH QUALITY AND VALUE
Despite strong performance, industry experts said there was still considerable room to expand Việt Nam's fruit and vegetable exports to China. However, they noted that this would depend on Vietnamese producers improving product quality, traceability, processing capacity and logistics to meet China's increasingly stringent import requirements.
FOOTWEAR INDUSTRY ACCELERATES GREEN TRANSITION, STRENGTHENS SUPPLY CHAINS
Việt Nam's footwear industry is stepping up efforts to build greener production and strengthen domestic supply chains as it seeks to maintain export growth amid global uncertainties. The sector earned nearly US$12 billion from exports in the first half of 2026. During the period, Việt Nam also overtook China to become the largest footwear supplier to the US market for the first time.
GROWTH RACE BEGINS TURNING PROVINCES INTO NEW ECONOMIC ENGINES
A new growth race is taking shape across Việt Nam, but this time it is not just about which province expands the fastest. The latest gross regional domestic product (GRDP) figures reveal a deeper shift in the way the country is managing its economy, with localities increasingly expected to become independent growth engines rather than simply implementing centrally assigned policies.
























