The meeting, co-chaired by Vietnam’s Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Sinh Nhat Tan and Parliamentary State Secretary at the German Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy Stefan Rouenhoff, aimed to review cooperation, remove obstacles and identify priority areas for future endeavors.

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Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Sinh Nhat Tan (center) co-chairs the meeting. (Photo: Ministry of Industry and Trade)

Tan said Vietnam is pleased to see the countries’ multifaceted ties deepen rapidly, underpinned by strong political relations, close coordination between ministries and growing links between the two business communities.

Both sides reaffirmed that energy cooperation remains a central pillar. They welcomed the upgrade of their cooperation framework to the Vietnam - Germany Energy Partnership, which is expected to support energy transition, emissions reduction towards net-zero targets, energy-security enhancement and expanded business-to-business cooperation.

The two officials agreed to implement the 2025-2026 action plan, maintain the annual high-level steering committee, establish a technical working group and strengthen training, research and enterprise networking. Vietnam highlighted Germany’s role in projects under the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) and called for closer cooperation to advance the prospective sustainable development goals.

Vietnam and Germany are committed to expanding collaboration in automotive production and attracting investment in supporting industries, including textiles, footwear, electronics and high-tech components. Vietnam urged German chemical manufacturers to explore opportunities in priority subsectors listed under the 2025 Law on Chemicals and work together on green-chemistry applications.

Both sides agreed to boost technology transfer, innovation and digital transformation in industry, and enhance workforce training, particularly in green skills, digital capabilities and Industry 4.0 management.

Regarding trade, the two countries pledged to improve information sharing, maintain stable trade flows, ensure supply-chain continuity and maximize the benefits of the E.U. - Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA). Vietnam asked Germany to help businesses comply with E.U. regulations and encouraged German firms to invest in the processing of agricultural and aquatic products, as well as in logistics, cold storage and transshipment hubs for exports to Europe.

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An overview of the meeting (Photo: Ministry of Industry and Trade)

The meeting took place in a constructive and cooperative atmosphere. The two chairs agreed to maintain regular sessions to support ministries and businesses in implementing agreed outcomes. Tan and Rouenhoff signed the minutes of the committee’s third meeting.

Germany is Vietnam’s second-largest trading partner in Europe, accounting for more than 17% of Vietnam’s exports to the E.U., according to the 2024 customs data.

Bilateral trade reached more than 11.1 billion USD in the first ten months of 2025, up 15.1% year on year. Vietnam’s exports to Germany rose 19% to nearly 7.8 billion USD, while imports grew 7.2% to almost 3.2 billion USD.

Approximately 300 German companies operate in Vietnam, including major industrial groups such as Siemens, B. Braun, Bayer, Mercedes-Benz, Bosch and ZF.

As of October 31, Germany had 509 active investment projects in Vietnam with total registered capital of 3.009 billion USD, ranking 17th among 153 countries and territories investing in the country, according to statistics from the Ministry of Finance.

Source: VNA