Tin tức

Vietnam-EU Trade Enters a New Era: Green, Inclusive and Global

Vietnam-EU Trade Enters a New Era: Green, Inclusive and Global

Vietnam and the European Union are entering a significant new stage in their economic and trade cooperation. Five years into the implementation of the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA), both parties are shifting focus toward sustainability, inclusive growth, and deeper integration into global value chains.

Vietnam-EU Trade Enters a New Era: Green, Inclusive and Global

Strong Foundations After Five Years

Since the EVFTA became effective, bilateral trade volumes have grown significantly. Exports from Vietnam to the EU have expanded at an average annual rate of around 11.7 percent, while imports from the EU have grown by roughly 6.1 percent each year. These results reflect the robustness of the trade partnership and its growing importance to both sides.

The EU remains Vietnam’s largest trading partner among ASEAN, ranking as Vietnam’s third-largest export market and fifth-largest import source. Meanwhile, Vietnam is now among the top ten supply-partners to the EU.

New Priorities: Green, Digital, Inclusive

As the trade relationship matures, new drivers of cooperation are taking centre stage:

  • Sustainable value chains: Vietnam is becoming an increasingly attractive investment destination for sustainable industries. European companies highlight Vietnam’s rising competitive supply base and ability to adopt ESG (environmental, social and governance) standards.

  • Digital transformation: The evolving trade relationship is supported by digital trade facilitation, improved regulatory alignment, and logistics modernization.

  • Inclusive growth: Policies emphasise that growth must benefit all parts of society. Trade and investment are being aligned with broader goals such as climate action, circular economy and energy transition.

Strategic Implications for Businesses

  • Market access: EU businesses benefit from preferential tariffs and Vietnam’s improved investment environment. Vietnamese exporters gain access to high value markets in the EU.

  • Supply-chain integration: Vietnamese firms must be ready to meet stricter European standards in labour, environment, traceability and sustainability.

  • Investment opportunities: Sectors like renewable energy, green manufacturing, agro-processing and digital services are becoming gateways for deeper EU-Vietnam partnerships.

  • Regulatory readiness: With new EU standards such as CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism), CS3D and EUDR, Vietnamese businesses must upgrade processes and sustainability governance to stay competitive.

Challenges and Next Steps

  • Compliance burden: Meeting evolving EU regulations on sustainability and traceability requires investment and coordination across the supply chain.

  • Capacity building: Vietnam needs to develop its logistics infrastructure, digital platforms and workforce skills to support advanced integration.

  • Equity in growth: Ensuring that benefits of the trade expansion reach small-and-medium enterprises and regional economies.

  • Strategic localisation: Businesses must adapt their products and services for European markets, ensuring they meet both quality and sustainability criteria.

Conclusion

The Vietnam-EU economic relationship is no longer simply about tariff cuts or volume growth—it is now about building a sustainable, inclusive and digitally-connected trade and investment ecosystem. This next chapter offers opportunities as well as responsibilities for Vietnamese companies, EU investors and policy-makers alike. By aligning closely on sustainability, digitalisation and value-chain development, both sides stand to consolidate their long-term partnership and strengthen Vietnam’s role as a reliable global supplier.

Read more:

Maersk Reroutes TP7 Service in Response to China’s New Port Fee Policy 

Dịch vụ chuyển phát nhanh đi New Zealand 

Rate this post
tts_HangHP