The Việt Nam National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) has decided to form teams to handle its loss-making projects since the snail-pace progress of the process has displeased the Government.— Photo vneconomy.vn |
HÀ NỘI — The Việt Nam National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) has decided to form teams to handle its loss-making projects since the snail-pace progress of the process has displeased the Government.
The decision was announced on Friday at a meeting between the corporation’s heads and representatives of the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT).
The taskforce teams will be responsible for drawing up concrete plans to handle each project, which include detailed roadmaps, needed mechanisms and policies, and submit them to the corporation’s heads for further steps.
The move came just a few days after Deputy Prime Minister Vương Đình Huệ openly criticised PVN for the ineffective handling of unprofitable projects at a meeting with the MoIT and some State-owned enterprises to seek measures for dealing with 12 loss-making projects, five of them at PVN.
They include three biofuel factories in Phú Thọ, Quảng Ngãi and Bình Phước provinces, the PVTex Đình Vũ Yarn Plant and Dung Quất ship-building plant.
Of the five projects, the MoIT decided to declare bankruptcy for the Phú Thọ Ethanol Biofuel Plant and Dung Quất Ship Building Industry Company.
The MoIT asked PVN to work with its partners to restart the Dung Quất ethanol biofuel project in Quảng Ngãi Province and the Đình Vũ yarn plant in Hải Phòng, then offload the State capital in the two projects.
For the Bình Phước ethanol biofuel project, the MoIT asked PVN to work with foreign investors to resume the project because it is involved in the replacement of RON92 petrol with E5 biofuel starting January 1, 2018.
At the Friday meeting, PetroVietnam General Director Nguyễn Vũ Trường Sơn admitted that the handling of these projects yielded no progress over the past year. “All activities just stopped at holding debates and discussion. Almost no work has been implemented,” he said. He attributed the problem to hurdles in financial mechanisms, particularly the shortage of money.
For example, restarting the Đình Vũ plant required a big sum of money, which the company could not secure. The finalisation of Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) agreements for the biofuel factories in Phú Thọ and Quảng Ngãi also required additional bank loans, and this required guidances from MoIT and the Government, he said.
PetroVietnam Deputy Director General Nguyễn Hữu Dũng said the corporation had prepared various plans, such as asset auctioning and divestment, but was unable to implement them because it did not get funds from the State.
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Hoàng Quốc Vượng, however, reaffirmed that the Government was resolute about not spending more money on these projects. He told the companies in charge of the projects to carry out measures like establishing financial reserve funds, filing for bankruptcy or selling projects to other investors to raise the neded money.
“But top priority should be given to restarting the projects before divestment. So those which are joint stock companies must call shareholders’ meeting to finalise solutions for capital increase and report to the Government before July 15. In case the Government does not approve the capital increase solutions, then the companies should switch to Plan B of selling the projects to other investors,” he said. — VNS