Vietnam’s VinFast to hire 8,000 more employees for EV plant

Vinfast Vietnam
FILE PHOTO: A VinFast sales location is pictured at a shopping mall in Santa Monica, California, U.S., May 23, 2022. Picture taken May 23, 2022. REUTERS/David Swanson

HANOI (Reuters) – Vietnam’s VinFast is looking to hire 8,000 more employees for its electric-vehicle plant in Vietnam as it ramps up production to deliver its first battery-powered SUVs to the United States by the end of this year, the company said. 

VinFast currently employs 6,000  

VinFast, a unit of Vietnam’s biggest conglomerate Vingroup, currently employs 6,000 people in total.         

“New recruitments are for VinFast’s production expansion,” the company said in a Facebook post on its verified account announcing the hiring for its plant in Haiphong, Vietnam.

“New staff, including assembly workers, technicians, and engineers will start working from August and September.”   

Capacity to produce 250,000 vehicles

The Haiphong plant has capacity to produce 250,000 cars per year and VinFast has said it expects to upgrade that capacity to 600,000 by 2026.   

In March, VinFast announced it would build a plant in North Carolina with an initial projected capacity of 150,000 EVs a year. The company has said that plant would create 7,500 jobs.   

VinFast has said it expects to sell 750,000 EVs per year by 2026, started with the VF8 and VF9 all-electric SUVs it plans to begin producing in Vietnam for sales in North America and Europe.

8,000 reservations in USA    

The company said it had almost 8,000 reservations in the United States and expects to export and deliver VF8 models from the plant in Haiphong to US customers before the end of the year.

VinFast’s expansion and hiring in Vietnam comes at a time when Samsung Electronics Co Ltd has scaled back production at its massive smartphone plant in Vietnam in response to slower demand.  

Samsung, the world’s largest smartphone maker and Vietnam’s largest foreign employer, produces half of its global output in Vietnam.

(Reporting by Phuong Nguyen; Editing by Ros Russell)

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