(HBO) - The People’s Committee of Hoa Binh province has directed sectors and localities to take measures to remove difficulties in investing in infrastructure in industrial zones, create land funds to lure investment, and support projects to early become operational.
The
provincial Industrial Zones Management Board has carried out many activities to
promote investment in key areas at home and abroad. As a result, many
businesses have deployed investment projects in the locality.
Industrial zones in the province are now home to 90 licensed investment
projects, including 23 foreign direct investment (FDI) projects with total
registered capital of 496.75 million USD and 67 domestically invested ones worth
7.14 trillion VND. At present, 50 projects have been put into operation,
generating jobs for about 17,869 labourers./.
Once a mountainous province facing many challenges, Hoa Binh has, after more than a decade of implementing the national target programme on new-style rural area development, emerged as a bright spot in Vietnam’s northern midland and mountainous region. In the first quarter of 2025, the province recorded positive results, paving the way for Hoa Binh to enter a phase of accelerated growth with a proactive and confident mindset.
Hoa Binh province is steadily advancing its agricultural sector through the adoption of high-tech solutions, seen as a sustainable path for long-term development.
The steering committee for key projects of Hoa Binh province convened on May 14 to assess the progress of major ongoing developments
A delegation of Hoa Binh province has attended the "Meet Korea 2025" event, recently held by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Embassy of the Republic of Korea (RoK) in Vietnam, the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency, and the People's Committee of Hung Yen province.
Hoa Binh province joined Vietnam’s national "One Commune, One Product” (OCOP) programme in 2019, not simply as a mountainous region following central policy, but with a clear vision to revive the cultural and agricultural values in its villages and crops.
From just 16 certified products in its inaugural year to 158 by early 2025, the One Commune One Product (OCOP) programme in Hoa Binh province has followed a steady and strategic path. But beyond the numbers, it has reawakened local heritage, turning oranges, bamboo shoots, brocade, and herbal remedies into branded, market-ready goods - and, more profoundly, transformed how local communities value and present their own cultural identity.