A Post-Mission Report
By MIKOspace
First DPRK Business Mission 2018
18-22 September 2018
At The Dawn of Peace @ DPRK (North Korea)
We were there when peace began in the Korean
Peninsula.
From
18-22 September 2018, invited by the DPRK Committee for the Promotion of
International Trade (KOMT) in conjunction with the DPRK
Ministry of External Economic Relations (MEER), our 5-day fact-finding Business
Mission was designed to empower and facilitate Singapore companies, businesses,
investors, CEOs and entrepreneurs to explore and grow market opportunities and
possibilities in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
This historic First Business Mission to DPRK, invited by the DPRK Committee for the Promotion of International Trade (KOMT) in conjunction with the DPRK Ministry of External Economic Relations (MEER), was an exclusive opportunity for discovery and inspiration to uncover and leverage on the diversity that
DPRK
can add to the global marketplace of international trade and development.
We returned with a bundle of US$2+ billion worth of investment projects, possible the largest number by any business missions from Singapore to any countries.
We are
however prohibited by current sanction laws to secure any of the projects in any
formal contractual manner. In the
meantime, potential Korean partners and the participants shall continue to
exchange ideas and suggestions on the possible nature and outcome of future
project ventures. The following are some
of the investment-ready ventures:
·
Korea International
Exhibition and Convention Complex (KIECC) – US$250m
·
30-Storey 5-Star
Hotel in the KIECC Complex – US$150m
·
Tourist Bus Station –
US$5.55m
·
Petrol Filling
Stations – US$2.64m
·
Pelotherapy
Clinic – US$1.8m
·
Offshore Seafood
Farm – US$2.4m
·
Seafood Distribution
– US$500,000
·
Wonsan-Mt Kumgang
Railway Renovation – US$324m
·
Brewery – US$53m
·
Songdowan Hotel
Renovation – US$105m
·
Haean Hotel Hotel
Renovation – US$25m
·
Mokran Restaurant
Renovation – US$2.6m
·
Tanphung Restaurant
Renovation – US$700,000
·
Health Service
Complex – US$4.55m
·
Department Store
Renovation – US$7.4m
·
Wonsan Lighting
Apparatus Factory – US$2.75m
·
Wonsan Hotel
Facilities Factory – US$2.13m
·
Development of a
Singapore Industrial Park – US$600m-US$1billion
The
Koreans expressed great interest, enthusiasm and eagerness to work with
Singaporeans, whom they regard as the more experienced, modern and
knowledgeable alternative to their current abundance of PRC Chinese businessmen
already in DPRK. Indeed, most of our Business
Mission participants have richly diverse and vast hands-on business and
management experiences in several ASEAN countries, as well as China, Japan,
Europe and the USA.
On 19
September 2018, DPRK Leader Kim Jong Un and South Korea President Moon Jae-In
signed the Pyongyang
Declaration which also affirmed their earlier April 2018 Historic
Panmunjeom Declaration. Together, they declared to the world to abide
thoroughly by and faithfully implement the 2 Agreements and to take practical
measures to transform the Korean Peninsula into a land of permanent
peace.
We arrived on the previous day at the modern Pyongyang FNJ Airport in the late afternoon, to be greeted and processed by a smiling and friendly Immigration Officer, and worked our way through Customs after baggage claims. Modern baggage handling equipment and security screening sensors made for a smooth clearance. Laptops and mobile phones were also carefully inspected for objectionable pictures and apps. The airport clearance was significantly faster and more efficient than in Beijing, Vietnam, Bangkok and Dubai (recently visited).
Several
senior staff from our Host KOMT warmly welcomed and greeted our arrival as we
exit Customs. The 25-min road trip through Pyongyang streets saw many people
walking along the roads, while others packed the numerous electric tram buses.
There were also many cars, but no traffic jam. Traffic lights and ample
road-signs make Pyongyang city indistinguishable from any developed modern
metropolis. Many beautiful public parks, with landscaped bushes and flowers
have gatherings of people with children and families, exercising or otherwise
just resting by themselves or with loved ones. Also saw so many students in their common
sailor-like uniforms (Primary School) and white blouse (shorts)/blue skirt
(trousers) co-ordinates for older kids. The streets and roads were clean and
litter-free, unlike some parts of China, Hochiminh city, Malaysia, Indonesia,
India and many European cities.
We finally arrived at the 4+ (but likely 5-star) Potonggong Hotel located beside the famous Potonggang (or Pothong) River which winds itself through Pyongyang City. Check-in was instantaneous with passports in exchange for room keys. Well-lighted air-conditioned rooms have bottled water, large beds with clean sheets, clean towels and usual toiletries, shower heads and a bathtub with hot&cold water, bath robes and the indispensable furry slippers. Tap water is also drinkable. A kettle with cups and glasses provide abundant water for the unquenchable. The colour TV with remote controls has mostly Chinese channels and also English news channels like Aljazeera and RT. No BBC or CNN or Fox. Free internet connection is available via an Ethernet box in the room, while WIFI is available at the hotel lobby for just US$1.60 for 10 minutes. What more can a tired traveller ask for?
Breakfast
has everything, ranging from eggs, toasts, noodles, fish, vegetable, rice,
soups, milk, juices, coffee/tea … etc like the usual breakfast at any great
hotels in the world.
Investment and Financial Regulatory
Framework
The
next day, our meeting began with an overview of the financial investment
regulatory framework and the applicable laws.
To the potential investor, they have sufficient details and are
comprehensible in their English versions.
A complete
guide to all the applicable investment laws can be found here. They addressed the following key concern
areas of potential investors:
1)
Types
of Enterprises and Foreign Ownership Permitted;
2)
Contract
Laws and Related Regulations;
3)
Industrial
and Enterprise Dispute Settlements; and
4)
Movement
of Funds and Profits Repatriation.
Mission
participants were provided with the latest DPRK
Investment Guide which detailed over 114-pages with information and
address these key concerns of investors.
Their specific applications would however be customised to specific
projects. During discussions, there were
sincere assurances of flexible accommodation to the needs of particular
investors. Some specific projects were
used as illustrations.
Wonsan-Mt Kumgang Opportunities
A special treat to the Business Mission was the
presentation on Wonsan-Mt.
Kumgang International Tourist Zone (“the Zone”) by the Project Director
from the Korean Economic Development Agency responsible for its development.
The Zone is a
massive tourism project around Wonsan, a coastal city about 180 km from
Pyongyang City. It includes the areas of Wonsan, Masikryong Ski Resort, Ullim
Falls, Sogwang Temple, Thongchon and Mt. Kumgang and covers an area of some 400 km². In 2015, DPRK announced plans to invest US$7.8
billion (S$10.6 billion) into the Zone by 2025 with the aim to attract 1
million foreign tourists. There are more than 30 feasible investment-ready
projects ranging from US$50,000 to US$500,000 to US$4-US$100millions.
We have
at least 12 feasible investment-ready projects for Singaporean consideration in
the post-sanction Wonsan Zone. They include renewable energy eg wind turbines,
new hotel developments and renovation of older hotels, repairs and upgrading of
a mountain railway system, café and restaurants, petrol service stations,
lighting factory, plastic goods factory, seafood restaurant, folk martial art
centre, tourist bus station, fish farm, fitness centre and several others.
The Zone has approximately 140 historical relics, 10
sand beaches, 680 tourist attractions, 4 mineral springs, several bathing
resorts and natural lakes and more than 3.3 million tons of mud with
therapeutic properties for neuralgia and colitis.
New Exhibition & Convention Centre +
Hotel
We
visited the 14th Pyongyang Autumn International Trade Fair in the
ultra-modern
Pyongyang’s
Three Revolutions Exhibition Hall. Just
over 320 companies, with many Chinese companies were selling everything from
car batteries to "kangaroo essence" health pills. Several other
countries are also represented. For
example, a Russian medical technology company is selling heart-beat monitoring
wrist watches, and the kangaroo capsules, supposedly good for the health, are
being sold by a New Zealand company. Businesses from a few more countries, such
as Italy and Cuba, are there seeking business opportunities, but not selling
anything. The local products displayed were mostly clothing, traditional
medicines, cosmetics, processed foods and beverages. Several DPRK’s main
electronics makers also showed off their brands' flat-screen TVs, mobile
phones, laptops and tablets.
Daily
visitors to the 14th Autumn International Trade Fair exceeded 14,000
and nearly 45,000 during the entire event. The Korean International Exhibition
and Convention Company (KIECC) have plans for a new exhibition cum convention
complex which includes a 30-storey 5-star international hotel. It would triple the exhibition area to
accommodate 1,200 exhibitors from the current 400 capacity. The estimated investment in the exhibition
hall, without the hotel and convention centre, is US$250 million. The entire
project would likely require an investment of about US$400m-US$500m.
Negotiations
with some Chinese investors were recently terminated by the Chinese. We did not
ask for the reason. The opportunity for
a Singapore-KIECC JV hereby presents
itself for post-sanction agreement and execution. The KIECC in fact invites the Singapore DPRK
Business Mission to participate in the new IECC project because they knew and
have seen Singapore’s
experience and management expertise in mounting huge conventions and
exhibitions at the Singapore Expo complex and Suntec Convention City Centre.
Nampho Development Region - Waudo-Jindo SEZ (JINXIN Park)
We
travelled to Nampho, DPRK’s largest port city on the West coast, about 50 km South-West of
Pyongyang. Nampho is also the 2nd
largest city of DPRK with a population of about 1 million and occupying a land
area of 1,280 sqkm. Nampho Port has deep
waters and linked with over a hundred foreign countries and
regions, mainly China and ASEAN, for commercial trade.
The Jindo SEZ is a Special Export Processing Zone (SEZ) covering
1.8 km2 and spans part of Jindo-dong, Hwado-ri and Waudo-guyŏk. It has a Co-operation Period of 50 years.
JINXIN International Industrial Park
During discussions, ideas
and suggestions included the possibility of a Jindo-Singapore (JINXIN)
International Industrial Park, which may later combine with the Waudo SEZ
for about 3 km2 of land. The
land is currently a salt plain, like the original 30 km2 land of
the Sino-Singapore
Tianjin Eco City (SSTEC).
The Jinxin International Industrial Park, when realized as a JV with
MEER, or other Korean agency when sanctions are eased to permit such JV, could
look at the Vietnam-Singapore
Industrial Park (VSIP) as a possible development model. JINXIN shall however develop our own models
with interested investors leveraging on Singapore’s industrial park
experiences.
The costs of developing JINXIN have not yet been evaluated. The removal and replacement of several hundred meters of top soil soaked with brine would add to the initial cost. Land preparation for the small 3 sqkm after that could add investments to perhaps US$200m, assuming the government takes care of the infrastructural work of connecting roads, water, gas and power. Over time, investments by foreign companies may add several US$ billions once JINXIN is opened for business. JINXIN may become Singapore’s flagship in DPRK, post-sanctions, in the same way that VSIP was the catalyst for Vietnam’s industrial development since 1996.
Mangyongdae School Childrens' Palace
The Mangyongdae School Children's Palace (or Mangyongdae School Children's Palace)
in Pyongyang is a public facility managed by the Korean Youth Corps in DPRK
where children ages 6-17 years old can engage in extra-curricular activities,
such as learning music, foreign languages, gymnastic, calligraphy, computing
skills and sports. Established on 2 May
1989, it is the largest of the numerous palaces dedicated to children's
after-school activities. It is situated in Kwangbok (Liberation) Street, in the
north of Mangyongdae-guyok.
The Mangyongdae School Children's
Palace has 120 rooms, a swimming pool, a gymnasium and a 2,000 seat
theatre. It has 5,000 students attending
various classes on a 6-monthly cycle.
The classes are free but not every child chooses to enrol. No compulsion, a few actually dropped out
after a couple of months. Visitors were
treated to a concert on a moving stage in the beautiful and spacious theatre.
Juche National
Ideology
The
tremendous effort and resource commitment to develop core cohorts of Korean
youths beginning at 6 years old is clearly a visionary strategic and calculated
initiative to create her own future based on its Juche주체ideology and seen in the
practice of her unique socialist principles of independence, national economy
and self-defence. “Juche” translates to
“self-reliance” in Korean.
And as
peace
envelops the Korean peninsula, the reality of an independent,
self-confident, modernising and prosperous DPRK is already within the sights of
this generation.
The
following pictures shall speak for the activities in the Palace.
Ragwon Department Store
Ragwon
(Rakwon) Department store is mainly used by foreigners and well-off Koreans. “Ragwon”
means “paradise” in Korean. It is an
upscale department store that only accepts western currency in Pyongyang, North
Korea. About 90% of products sold here are foreign products. The Rakwon
Department Store tour also breaks from North Korean tourist tradition, as the
DPRK’s shopping malls are usually not open to foreign visitors. The agency
hopes that, by entering a department store only meant for local people,
visitors will learn and understand more about their lives.
Sentosa Business Centre – Singapore’s
Beachhead
Dinner
on the 3rd Day brought a pleasant surprise. The restaurant in a 4-storey building also
houses a barber shop and hair-salon, massage parlour, 3 types of spa, sauna and
a small gym. In a Conference Room on top
floor, we found a Singapore’s very own “Sentosa
Business Centre”. It was intended to
be a haven for Singapore businessmen to interact with venture partners. The Korean General Manager Mdm Ju told us
that the building was invested by a Singaporean businessman who was no longer
able to be involved personally in the venture due to sanctions and has left it
to her management.
Singapore therefore has already established a beachhead at the Sentosa Business Centre in Pyongyang. Post-sanctions, Singapore businesses can find ready partners who are Singaporeans already in DPRK, Koreans and other foreigners, at this business club.
Singapore
has only a small window of opportunity to leverage and realise the investment
goldmines offered to us as described above.
The future would belong to those who are ready for it, not those who are
waiting for the skies to be blue and clearer.
We
departed Pyongyang in an expectant mood, reflecting and contemplating the sea
of ready opportunities within our grasp, if not for the sanctions. The plan is to return soon in March-April 2019 to look deeper into
specific investment opportunities to realise and transform them into
Singapore’s international competitive advantages and for the benefits of
Singaporeans at home.
Anyone interested in the above projects or be part of the next DPRK expeditions or just interested in DPRK can contact me: miko.heng@gmail.com
11 comments:
Are we going to America to teach them our 2 bid, 4 bid, 6 bid, non guaranteed coe, guaranteed coe?
Sanctions not lifted. How to do business with.NK? Violate sanctions, US Trump will come after you! CIA may initiate Regime Change?
Too long and not interesting. Give up reading after 3 para.
Very very long ! Want to read RB's column gotta scroll down so long just to find his column. Very irksome!
Please lah, we are here to read RB's columns only !
This guy is clearly an opportunist. He even seized the opportunity to make use of RB's blog to do business and popularise himself. Cheap. No wonder he got his dog's badge from PAP.
Should advertise big time in MSM. Perhaps NTUC or Temasek may be interested to send a big team of early birds to catch the big worm. After all, it is proudly touted to be the biggest catch of close to $2 billion+, unheard of of any business delegation from Singapore to any county. The only thing is it is still birds in the bush.
Aiyah, all you haters. This is a fantastic development lah. Singapore Inc, the Corporate State scores again. What is needed now are capital markets for N Korea. Then the fun can really begin.
Capitalism---#TheUnknownIdeal
Good to see the CPF money working hard for the nation! 👌🏽💪🏽👍🏻🤑
Follow The Money!
CPF money working hard for the nation.
CPF contributors also working hard for the CPF money under the CPF masters.
Your money, their money. Their money, their money.
Yap, follow the money in CPF, GIC and Temasek!
Matilah topping up the cpf accounts of all his kins.
Safe, sound and sure win.
@ 1136
>> Safe, sound and sure win.
<<
Yah what. General elections akan datang. So govt will definitely "bribe" people for votes. You top-up $100, govt top-up $?? (whatever arbitrary amount lah...suka suka one)...of course win lah. Vote PAP. They will use your money to bribe you, and you will always be the willing victim in this BLATANT on-going scam.
Resistance is futile 😜
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