Singapore and Vietnam have expanded their scope of bilateral economic cooperation and signed new deals on sustainable infrastructure, skills development and the exchange of innovation talent.
Energy connectivity, sustainability, and digital solutions and innovation are new and emerging areas in which both countries want to improve cooperation under the Singapore-Vietnam Connectivity Framework Agreement.
On Monday (28 Aug 2023), they exchanged side letters to mark the expansion of the agreement – the first upgrade since it was signed in 2005 – and also inked three new memorandums of understanding (MOUs) in the areas of green economy, innovation and skills development.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is on a three-day official visit to the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi, witnessed these events with his counterpart Pham Minh Chinh.
PM Lee had earlier in the day laid a wreath at the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum before attending a welcome ceremony at the Presidential Palace.
He then met Mr Chinh at the Office of the Government.
In a speech at an official dinner hosted by Mr Chinh, PM Lee highlighted the close cooperation between Singapore and Vietnam, and the strong political trust built over the decades.
This year marks 50 years of diplomatic relations between both countries and 10 years of their strategic partnership.
“Through the years, I have watched the Vietnamese leaders work tirelessly alongside their people, who are among the most energetic and talented in Southeast Asia,” said PM Lee.
He added that he was looking forward to meeting young people from Vietnam National University and the Singapore-Vietnam Youth Leaders Exchange Programme on Tuesday.
“We have much to learn from Vietnam, and I hope that this will be a two-way exchange with our youth and professionals,” he said.
On the economic front, Singapore was Vietnam’s second-largest foreign investor as at last December, with a cumulative investment of US$70.8 billion (S$96 billion).
Vietnam was Singapore’s 11th-largest trading partner, with bilateral goods trade growing 16.4 per cent year on year to S$31.3 billion in 2022.