Chemical analysis labs need more domestic equipment
Viet Nam should manufacture more machinery for chemical analytical laboratories as the market for such services is huge, experts have said.
Phung Minh Lai, deputy head of the National Agency for Science and Technology Information, said the annual growth rate of Viet Nam’s chemical industry would be between 10 per cent and 15 per cent in the next few years.
As part of a chemical industry development plan, the government has set up production targets for the petrochemical and pharmaco-chemical industries by 2020.
The Ministry of Health estimates that the total value of drug consumption in Viet Nam this year could reach nearly US$1.5 billion.
The growth rate of the pharmaceutical industry has reached 15 per cent annually in recent years, but the scale of the industry still has been small.
The industry mostly produces typical pharmaceutical products with simple technology, according to Lai.
To reach the target, the Government will invest around 11 million euros (US$14 million) in the industry by 2015.
These include funds for many projects, including six phamarceutical production plants, some of which would make antibiotics and sorbitol products.
Moreover, pharmaceutical companies are looking for foreign partners to help them put biotechnology into actual practice.
For the petrochemical industry, Viet Nam has built three plants during the first phase, and the second phase will be implemented by 2015.
The government also will invest nearly 30 million euros ($38 million) in environmental-research projects, including water and sewage treatment as well as solid waste management.
Viet Nam has applied biotechnology in the agricultural and aquacultural sectors as well as the food processing industry.
Because water and food safety certification are two areas with high demand, where laboratories and modern equipment are necessary.
Currently, the State is investing in building 17 main laboratories, but Lai said this was insufficient.
Most of the equipment now in use was imported from Europe and Asia.
Nicole Klammer, head of the Analytica Viet Nam Project, said the country needed an outstanding platform for the analytical lab field.
Analytica Viet Nam on April 7-9 next year will hold a fair to display a variety of equipment that can be used in the country. — VNS