Many opinions from experts, scientists , and management agencies to determine the direction and tasks of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park were recorded from the workshop 'Strategy for developing High-Tech Park to 2030, vision to 2045'.
Many opinions from experts, scientists, and management agencies to determine the direction and tasks of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park - Photo: CT
Taking place on January 10, the workshop was organized by the Management Board of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park in collaboration with the Ho Chi Minh City Institute for Development Studies.
Center for high technology, innovation and advanced manufacturing
Deputy Head of the Management Board of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park Le Quoc Cuong announced information on repositioning the mission, vision, and core values of the Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park.
The mission of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park is to become the leading center of high technology, innovation and advanced manufacturing in Southeast Asia. To be the driving force for promoting knowledge economy and digital transformation in Ho Chi Minh City as well as the whole country. To promote innovation, high technology application, creating high value-added products. To support economic transformation and develop endogenous high-tech resources.
According to Mr. Cuong, Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park has a vision to become a national high-tech park oriented by industry, operating according to an international standard model. It plays the role of a center of innovation clusters in the region, the nucleus of Thu Duc City, a creative and highly interactive urban area in the east of the city.
Creativity, connectivity and breakthrough are three key phrases about the core values of the High-Tech Park.
Dr. Nguyen Le Hung, Deputy Director of High Technology Department, Ministry of Science and Technology - Photo: CT
Dr. Nguyen Le Hung, Deputy Director of the Department of High Technology, Ministry of Science and Technology, affirmed that science and technology, innovation and national digital transformation are the top important breakthroughs.
From there, Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park needs to arrange the public science and technology organization system in line with the orientation, prioritizing science, technology and innovation.
Need at least 300 design enterprises, 3 semiconductor chip manufacturing factories, 20 packaging factories
Prof. Dr. Dang Luong Mo - honorary professor of Hosei University (Japan), advisor to the director of Ho Chi Minh City National University, honorary president of HSIA - clearly stated that the role of Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park in the development of semiconductor - microchip technology in the city is very important.
According to him, Vietnam has potential for rare earth reserves, estimated at about 20 million tons. Vietnam is also one of the 16 most populous countries in the world, with a young population, human resources advantages capable of STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics), quickly meeting the human resource needs to develop the semiconductor industry.
"We need to focus on building a semiconductor industry development strategy right now," said Professor Dang Luong Mo.
PhD students conduct research at the Microchip and High Frequency Systems Laboratory of the University of Technology (Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City) - Photo: NHU QUYNH
Professor Dang Luong Mo said that it is necessary to form at least 300 design enterprises, 3 semiconductor chip manufacturing factories, 20 semiconductor product packaging and testing factories to master research and development in the semiconductor field.
To solve this difficult problem, he believes that it is necessary to mobilize one of two options, or both, which are international cooperation and mobilizing overseas Vietnamese forces.
Ms. Nguyen Vo Minh Thu, Deputy Head of the Management Board of Export Processing Zones - Industrial Parks, participated in the workshop with a presentation on "The role of High-tech Parks in promoting the conversion of industrial parks into high-tech industrial parks and forming symbiotic industrial clusters".
The workshop also had the participation of MSc. Tran Thanh Binh, Deputy Director of the Ho Chi Minh City Institute for Development Studies, with a presentation on "Specific mechanisms for the High-Tech Park to make the High-Tech Park a growth pole based on R&D and innovation".
Mr. Pham Chanh Truc, former Standing Deputy Secretary of the Ho Chi Minh City Party Committee, raised a series of questions, such as why the City High-Tech Park does not attract domestic enterprises to participate in product research and development? Why does the State not invest heavily in the Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park? Why has the City High-Tech Park not attracted leading experts and great scientists?...
Mr. Truc also gave some answers. The first is that the Ho Chi Minh City High-Tech Park is not strong enough (lacking leading scientists, thus lacking large topics and projects) and does not have enough capital.
Second, because domestic and foreign enterprises have not seen the State focus on building and developing the High-Tech Park. The State does not use the City High-Tech Park as a key tool.
Third, the city's team of scientists is large but scattered, and there are no large projects to gather this force.
Fourth, there is no complete ecosystem focused on building for any technology or final product.
Five is the lack of technology support for both research and development, incubation and high-tech manufacturing.
Finally, the technological infrastructure is not strong enough and not complete.
Source: https://tuoitre.vn/khu-cong-nghe-cao-o-dau-trong-su-nghiep-phat-trien-cong-nghiep-ban-dan-vi-mach-20250110162107468.htm
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