
Exclusive: Work on $1 bln Trump Tower in Vietnam could start next year, source says
HANOI, May 30 (Reuters) - Investment in a planned Trump Tower in Vietnam is estimated at around $1 billion and construction of the at least 60-storey skyscraper could start next year, a person familiar with the discussions told Reuters.
The building, for which plans are still preliminary, would be the second major project the Trump Organization, U.S. President Donald Trump's family business, is reviewing in Vietnam. The Southeast Asian country is currently in trade talks with Washington to avoid crippling 46% tariffs.
Eric Trump, senior vice president of the Trump Organization, visited Vietnam last week to survey the site for the tower in the country's southern business hub of Ho Chi Minh City and to attend the groundbreaking for a golf resort in northern Vietnam. The approval for the golf club, according to Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, had been expedited by the authorities.
The Trump Organization would operate the golf club, while its Vietnamese partner, real estate firm Kinhbac City (KBC.HM), opens new tab, would focus on developing it with an estimated investment of $1.5 billion, the source said. The division of work had not been previously reported.
A similar arrangement is likely to be agreed for the Trump Tower, with the investment expected to come mostly from local partners, the source said, declining to be named because the information is not public.
The Trump Organization did not reply to a request for comment.
Kinhbac City, a leading industrial real estate developer in Vietnam, did not respond to a request for comment.
When it announced its collaboration with the Trump Organization in October, the company said the venture "will focus on developing 5-star hotels, championship-style golf courses, and luxurious residential estates and unparalleled amenities in Vietnam."
During his visit last week, Eric Trump toured the site where the skyscraper would be built and met local officials, the source said. That was in line with the schedule of his engagements with the city's authorities, according to a Vietnamese document seen by Reuters.
The tower would be built in Thu Thiem, an area under development in central Ho Chi Minh City where a new financial centre is planned to be built, the document from the city's authorities showed.
At the groundbreaking for the golf resort, Eric Trump said the projects to be developed in Vietnam would be "the envy of all of Asia and of the entire world", adding he would visit the country frequently to further the company's plans.
Approvals for the tower project are still being sought and no final decision had been made about when construction will start, the source said, adding that the aim was to have the groundbreaking next year.
The investment could be larger than $1 billion if permits are obtained for a building with more than 60 floors, the person said.
The Trump Organization operates several towers in the United States and across the world, but does not own all of them.
The flagship Trump Tower in the Manhattan neighbourhood of New York City was built in the 1980s. Others have since been built in Chicago, Florida and abroad, including in Turkey and the Philippines.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
28 minutes ago
- Reuters
Sacyr sells Colombian assets for $1.6 billion
June 10 (Reuters) - Spanish engineering firm Sacyr ( opens new tab has agreed to sell its stake in three toll roads in different regions of Colombia for $1.6 billion, the company said on Tuesday, as it raises cash to expand in the United States. Infrastructure fund Actis will take over the assets in Colombia, Sacyr said in a filing to the stock market regulator. The transaction, which is expected to conclude in the second half of this year, will generate a cash inflow worth $318 million, it added. Sacyr, which focuses on motorway concessions, said earlier this year that it intended to sell assets in Colombia and Chile and was looking for partners to bid for larger and more lucrative highway projects in the U.S. where it competes with bigger construction firms.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Sizewell C nuclear plant gets go-ahead with £14.2bn of government funding
Update: Date: 08:29 BST Title: Sizewell C should be generating electricity by mid-2030s, Miliband confirms Content: Miliband is then asked if he can provide a target date for Sizewell C to start providing electricity to the UK's power grid. The energy secretary says that it will take "about a decade", and should start supplying power in the mid-2030s. Update: Date: 08:27 BST Title: China will not be able to invest, Miliband insists Content: Although the government is investing at least £14.2bn in Sizewell C, there will also be other investors. Miliband is asked whether China will be able to invest in the new power station. "No," he tells Justin Webb - but declines to go into the details on who private bidders might be. "It's majority public investment in Sizewell C," he says, adding that there will be "some" private investment but all bidders will go through national security checks. Update: Date: 08:26 BST Title: Why not just invest in 'green' renewables? Content: Miliband continues, saying some people may be wondering why the government doesn't just invest in renewables. We do want renewables, he says, "but we also need nuclear". Electricity demand will double by 2050 as we move away from fossil fuels, he adds, and "most of our nuclear fleet is retiring". "This is absolutely the right thing to do" in terms of value for money and for the taxpayer, he says. Update: Date: 08:23 BST Title: Sizewell is already approved - so what's different this time? Content: After again being pressed on the government's U-turn on winter fuel payments, Miliband is asked by Justin Webb on the Today programme what is different from previous announcements on Sizewell C. (As a reminder, regulators approved Sizewell C during the previous government.) Miliband says the difference is "that we're funding it - we're putting forward the money to make it happen". He says this is the biggest investment in nuclear in half a century. "We are doing this because we want long-term energy security," he adds. Update: Date: 08:12 BST Title: Ed Miliband speaking to Today - watch live Content: The energy secretary is now speaking to our colleagues on BBC Radio 4's Today programme - you can watch live at the top of the page. We'll have all the key lines here. BBC Radio Suffolk's breakfast show with Wayne Bavin is live from the neighbouring Suffolk town of Leiston this morning. Update: Date: 08:09 BST Title: This is state-sponsored ecocide, claims campaign group Content: Alice CunninghamBBC News, Suffolk Campaign group, Together Against Sizewell C, says it is "outraged" by the funding announcement. Chris Wilson from the group says initial works on the power plant have already harmed the local environment. 'Sizewell C's preparatory works have caused the loss of thousands of trees and miles of hedging as well as covering hundreds of acres with concrete and tarmac, much in the Suffolk Coast and Heaths National Landscape," he says. "Together with the hundreds of millions of fish that will be killed annually in its cooling water system during its 60 years of operation, in our eyes, the Sizewell C project is state-sponsored ecocide." Update: Date: 08:02 BST Title: New investment but work has already begun Content: Ben ParkerBBC News, Suffolk Thousands of tonnes of soil are being moved ahead of construction of the power station Despite today's announcement of fresh government investment, work on Sizewell C started some time ago, which includes: Update: Date: 07:57 BST Title: Government determined to 'go big' on nuclear Content: Henry ZeffmanChief political correspondent Sizewell was first formally identified, external as a potential site for a new nuclear power plant in 2009 by the then Labour government and its energy secretary - Ed Miliband. Sixteen years, seven prime ministers, and 10 energy secretaries later, the new energy secretary - Ed Miliband - believes the £14bn extra investment in Sizewell C will end the "years of delay" over the project. Government sources say they are determined to "go big" on nuclear power. While Miliband himself has long believed nuclear power is a key way to combat climate change, the government also views it as a reliable power source in a new age of energy insecurity. Yet even if the government's new commitment is the crucial final piece of the puzzle, it's important to stress that Sizewell C is still likely to take at least a decade to complete. Update: Date: 07:55 BST Title: A huge task that will take at least a decade to complete Content: Simon JackBusiness editor Building a nuclear power station is a colossal engineering and financial undertaking. The government has committed to spending £14bn of public money over the next four years on a project it insists will: But it will take at least a decade to complete and the plant of which it is a copy, Hinkley Point C in Somerset, will switch on in the early 2030s - over a decade late and costing billions more than originally planned. The project has faced opposition at local and national level from those who believe Sizewell C will prove to be a costly mistake. But the government insists that nuclear provides enormous amounts of low carbon, non-intermittent energy that will form a crucial part of the UK's energy future. There is also funding to develop smaller reactors and money for research into fusion. This is not the first government to enthusiastically usher in a new nuclear age and realising it will take ages yet. Update: Date: 07:52 BST Title: The history of Sizewell Content: Nuclear power has been produced from Sizewell since the 1960s Sizewell is no stranger to nuclear energy. In 1955, Sizewell A was first proposed as part of the government's post-war White Paper titled A Programme of Nuclear Power. It wanted to build a number of nuclear power plants across the country and Sizewell A, a Magnox plant, was fully operational by 1966. Sizewell A was eventually decommissioned and shut down in 2006, with work still ongoing to demolish the site. Plans for Sizewell B, a pressurised water reactor, were first announced in 1969. After a lengthy planning process, it started generating electricity in 1995. It is still in operation and produces 3.1% of the UK's energy needs. It is the UK's only pressurised water reactor. Update: Date: 07:48 BST Title: We'll learn from Hinkley C to build Sizewell C, says Miliband Content: BBC Breakfast's Jon Kay further presses Miliband on the timetable for Sizewell C. Kay says he remembers as a young reporter when Hinkley C - a power plant in Somerset - was being talked about, and it still isn't completed. He asks Miliband what lessons can be learned from that plant. Miliband says they are "replicating Hinkley at Sizewell", and says lessons from the Somerset plant will help Sizewell built more easily. The government is "confident it can be built quicker and cheaper" than Hinkley, he adds. Update: Date: 07:46 BST Title: Is this the final go-ahead? Content: Vikki IrwinBBC Suffolk political reporter I do not think you can say definitely just yet, but I think this is a major step forward in terms of getting the money and attracting investors to this project. The final investment decision will be in July and obviously it is a lot of money. That is what some of the detractors say about this project say - that it is way too expensive. Update: Date: 07:45 BST Title: When will the plant actually deliver electricity? Content: The energy secretary is now asked when the plant will actually begin providing energy. As a reminder, the plant is expected to take at least a decade to build. Miliband declines to give a precise timetable, but says the government is making "long-term decisions for the future of the country" - adding that's what they were elected to do "and that's what Sizewell C is about". Update: Date: 07:43 BST Title: We're investing in the future, says Miliband Content: After being pressed on Labour's U-turn on winter fuel payments - which was confirmed yesterday - Miliband stresses that expanded investment in nuclear will deliver "clean energy". Sizewell C "shows what we will see this week from the chancellor - a commitment to invest in the future," Miliband says. As a reminder - Chancellor Rachel Reeves is delivering her Spending Review tomorrow Update: Date: 07:32 BST Title: Ed Miliband about to speak - watch live Content: Our colleagues on BBC Breakfast are about to interview Energy Secretary Ed Miliband - watch live at the top of the page. Update: Date: 07:29 BST Title: Trade unions welcome 'good, skilled, unionised jobs' Content: Trade unions have so far welcomed this morning's news. The GMB union's regional secretary Warren Kenny says that "without new nuclear, there can be no net zero". He also says Sizewell C will provide "thousands of good, skilled, unionised jobs" - a sentiment echoed by Mike Clancy, general secretary of the Prospect union. "New nuclear is essential to achieving net zero, providing a baseload of clean and secure energy, as well as supporting good, unionised jobs," he says. The plant's construction is expected to create 10,000 jobs, according to the Treasury. Thousands more are expected to be created in firms supplying the plant. Once operational, Sizewell C is expected to employ 900 people. Update: Date: 07:19 BST Title: Come clean on the total cost, says pressure group Content: As we reported earlier, the cost of building Sizewell C has been estimated at £20bn - and builders EDF have rejected claims that the true cost could double to £40bn. Alison Downes, of the Stop Sizewell C pressure group, said ministers had not "come clean" about the full cost of the project. "There still appears to be no final investment decision for Sizewell C, but £14.2 billion in taxpayers' funding, a decision we condemn and firmly believe the government will come to regret, " she says. "Where is the benefit for voters in ploughing more money into Sizewell C that could be spent on other priorities, and when the project will add to consumer bills and is guaranteed to be late and overspent just like Hinkley C? "Ministers have still not come clean about Sizewell C's cost and, given negotiations with private investors are incomplete, they have signed away all leverage and will be forced to offer generous deals that undermine value for money. "Starmer and Reeves have just signed up to HS2 mark 2." Alison Downes Update: Date: 07:15 BST Title: What is Sizewell C? Content: Sizewell B's single white dome on the blue building is to the left of the proposed double-reactor plant (on the far right). Sizewell A is the grey building on the far left of the picture, casting a shadow on to the beach French energy company EDF wants to build a new two-reactor nuclear power station that could generate 3.2 gigawatts of electricity. It is estimated it could power the equivalent of six million homes and operate for 60 years. It would sit immediately to the north of Sizewell B, which began generating electricity in 1995. Sizewell A opened in 1967 but it stopped generating power in December 2006 and the lengthy decommissioning process is ongoing. Update: Date: 07:10 BST Title: Investment will deliver 'golden age of clean energy' says Miliband Content: Energy Secretary Ed Miliband says the £14.2bn investment is necessary "to deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance". He says that the plant is "he only way to protect family finances, take back control of our energy, and tackle the climate crisis". In comments to the Guardian newspaper, Miliband adds that it will get the country "off the fossil fuel rollercoaster". As a reminder, Miliband will speak live to the BBC at 07:30 and 08:10 - you'll be able to watch live on this page. Update: Date: 07:07 BST Title: How much has already been invested? Content: Various different funding announcements have been made over the years by different governments. A spokesperson for the Department of Energy Security confirmed that with today's announcement, a total of £17.8bn of taxpayers' money had been put towards the project. This included some funding from a subsidy scheme called Devex. The project is still looking for private investors before building work can get under way. Visitors to the area, and to the RSPB's Minsmere nature reserve will have already seen that some preparatory work has taken place to the north of the existing Sizewell site.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Philippine senators prepare to be jurors in Sara Duterte's impeachment trial
MANILA, June 10 (Reuters) - Philippine senators were preparing to be sworn in as jurors in Wednesday's impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte, who faces a lifetime political ban if convicted of high crimes and betraying the public trust. The trial could be a pivotal moment in Philippine politics by not only making or breaking Duterte, but also carrying big implications for President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and his agenda for the remaining three years of his presidency and beyond. A likely contender to be the next president, Duterte, 47, was impeached in February by the lower house of Congress. She denies all the accusations, from budget anomalies to amassing unusual wealth and threatening the lives of Marcos, his wife, and the house speaker. "We stand ready to confront the charges and expose the baselessness of the accusations," her office said in a statement on Tuesday. The speaker of the Senate will be the presiding officer at her trial, with its other 22 members as jurors. A two-thirds majority is required to convict Duterte, which would kill off her hopes of running for president in 2028. The trial of the popular daughter of firebrand former President Rodrigo Duterte follows an acrimonious falling-out with former ally Marcos, who ran on a joint ticket that won the 2022 election in a landslide. Marcos is limited to a single term in office and is expected to try to retain future influence by grooming a successor capable of fending off Duterte in the next election if she is acquitted. The president has distanced himself from the impeachment process, even though it was launched by his legislative allies. The trial comes after a stronger-than-expected showing for Duterte's allies in last month's midterm elections. That demonstrated her enduring influence, despite the battle with Marcos and the arrest and handover to the International Criminal Court of her father in March over thousands of killings in a "war on drugs" he waged as president from 2016 to 2022. Sara Duterte is the fifth top official in the Philippines to be impeached, only one of whom, Renato Corona, a former chief justice of the supreme court, was convicted. The trial of former President Joseph Estrada was aborted in 2001 after some prosecutors walked out, while the resignations of two officials, an election commission chairman and an ombudsman, followed their impeachments. The start of Duterte's trial comes just three days after the end of the final session of the current Senate, with 12 new members set to join when the chamber next gathers in July. Duterte had asked the Supreme Court to nullify the impeachment complaint against her as being politically motivated. The court ordered Congress to respond. "The impeachment process must never be weaponised to harass, silence, or eliminate political opponents," her office said in Tuesday's statement. "It is a constitutional mechanism, not a political tool."