Insider Brief
- CT Group of Vietnam signed an MoU with a South Korean drone technology company to export 5,000 heavy-duty unmanned cargo aircraft, marking Vietnam’s large-scale entry into the global UAV market.
- The domestically developed drones, capable of carrying 60–300 kg payloads and using 85% locally sourced components, feature in-house–designed semiconductor chips, giving CT Group a competitive edge in a field dominated by advanced economies.
- Alongside the UAV deal, CT Group secured an agreement to export 100 million ATP semiconductor chips to South Korea, reinforcing Vietnam’s ambitions in both aerospace and semiconductor industries.
Vietnam has secured its first major export deal for unmanned cargo aircraft with South Korea.
CT Group of Vietnam signed a memorandum of understanding this week with an unnamed South Korean drone technology company to supply 5,000 heavy-duty unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, during the Vietnam–Korea Economic Forum in Seoul. The event was attended by Vietnam’s General Secretary To Lam and South Korea’s Prime Minister Kim Min-seok, underscoring the deal’s strategic importance, according to CT Group.
The agreement marks Vietnam’s entry into the global UAV market at scale. CT Group said the drones, developed by its subsidiary CT UAV, can carry payloads ranging from 60 (132 lbs) to 300 kilograms (661 lbs) and have a localization rate of up to 85%, meaning most components and technology are domestically produced. The company also designs its own semiconductor chips for UAV systems — a capability that gives it a rare edge in a sector dominated by a few advanced economies.
UAV technology is increasingly used in logistics, agriculture, security, healthcare, and environmental monitoring, as well as in defense and emergency response. CT Group emphasized that the South Korean order validates the technical quality of its products in one of the world’s most competitive and selective technology markets. The deal also positions the Vietnamese company to pursue additional contracts in other countries.
The South Korean contract was one of two high-profile agreements CT Group announced at the forum. The company also reached a deal to export 100 million ATP semiconductor chips to an unnamed South Korean partner. Semiconductors are a critical and highly complex component of modern electronics, and global production is concentrated in a handful of technologically advanced nations. CT Group framed the agreement as proof that Vietnam is ready to compete in industries at the heart of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
According to CT Group, mastering UAV design and production could help usher in what it called an “era of spatial automation,” where autonomous flying systems enhance productivity across economic sectors. The company is working on UAVs integrated with artificial intelligence, enabling them to self-learn and make decisions without human input. It is also developing an interconnected ecosystem that combines UAV hardware, AI, semiconductor technology, and geolocation systems to support large-scale digital transformation projects for urban and environmental management.




