VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture - VinUni
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:31
VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture - VinUni
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VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture
VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture
April 14, 2026
Table of contents
Orchards are more than just a landscape; they are the backbone of livelihoods for thousands of farmers and a cornerstone of Vietnam’s agricultural exports. However, this vital sector is facing unprecedented threats from climate change. Rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, and salinity intrusion are disrupting natural flowering cycles and the activity of essential pollinators. Traditional farming, which relies on manual observation, is no longer enough to keep up with these unpredictable environmental shifts.
In response to this urgent challenge, VinUniversity has been awarded funding under the Aus4Innovation Partnership Grants (*) for the project “VietFruitRise: Smart Pollination Management to Improve Fruit Production in Vietnam” – marking a significant milestone as the University’s first project funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT).
VinUniversity serves as the Vietnamese Lead Entity by Assistant Professor
Thai Mai Thanh
(Principal Investigator at the Center for Environmental Intelligence and VinUni-Illinois Smart Health Center), co-leading the project with The University of Queensland, the Australian Lead Entity. Together, the partners bring interdisciplinary expertise in AI, agriculture, and environmental science to address climate pressures with data-driven innovation.
PI Dr. T. Thang Vo Doan from the University of Queensland emphasized the urgency of the challenge:
“We’re seeing shifts in flowering timing, reduced pollinator activity, and more uncertainty in fruit set. These changes are making it much harder for farmers to predict yields and manage their orchards effectively.”
At VinUniversity, Assistant Professor Thai Mai Thanh highlighted the implications for rural livelihoods:
“When pollination becomes unreliable, it directly affects both productivity and income stability. Farmers need better tools to understand what’s happening in their orchards in real time.”
With total funding of AUD 544,240 and a 19-month implementation period starting in April 2026, VietFruitRise will modernize agriculture through three key technical pillars:
AIoT Monitoring: Deploying integrated field systems to capture real-time data on pollinators, beneficial insects, flowering, and microclimate conditions tailored for durian and mango orchards in the Mekong Delta.
Predictive Analytics: Leveraging AI and advanced sensing technologies to quantify pollination risks and visitation trends, providing farmers with uncertainty-aware data for better decision-making.
Digital Advisory Platform: Delivering orchard-level advisories via a bilingual web and mobile interface, making expert technical recommendations accessible to farmers and cooperatives at any time.
Dr. Thang noted:
“Our aim is to move beyond manual observation to a more informed, data-driven approach. We want to give farmers clear, timely guidance so they can anticipate pollination risks and respond more effectively.”
Furthermore, this project is committed to equitable development. Guided by a GEDSI (Gender Equality, Disability and Social Inclusion) approach, the solution is designed to ensure that women and underserved communities can also master these technologies, helping smallholder farmers benefit directly from innovation.
Assistant Professor Thai Mai Thanh emphasized the importance of user-centered design:
“It’s not just about the technology, it’s about making sure people can use it confidently and effectively. We’re working closely with local communities to ensure the system fits their needs.”
This project exemplifies VinUniversity’s commitment to conducting high-impact, applied research that addresses critical societal challenges. Furthermore, it underscores the strength of the Australia-Vietnam partnership in leveraging science, technology, and innovation to drive sustainable agricultural development.
(*) The Aus4Innovation Partnership Grants is a key component of the Aus4Innovation program, a ten-year initiative (2018-2028) funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, co-funded and managed by CSIRO, and delivered in partnership with Vietnam’s Ministry of Science and Technology. Across five rounds, the Grants have provided over AUD $8 million in funding to support 18 projects, empowering Vietnamese and Australian institutions to address critical issues in agriculture, healthcare, environment and more, in a sustainable and inclusive manner.
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Home
VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture
VinUni Secures First Australian DFAT Funding to Advance Vietnam Climate-Resilient Agriculture
April 14, 2026
Table of contents
Orchards are more than just a landscape; they are the backbone of livelihoods for thousands of farmers and a cornerstone of Vietnam’s agricultural exports. However, this vital sector is facing unprecedented threats from climate change. Rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, and salinity intrusion are disrupting natural flowering cycles and the activity of essential pollinators. Traditional farming, which relies on manual observation, is no longer enough to keep up with these unpredictable environmental shifts.
In response to this urgent challenge, VinUniversity has been awarded funding under the Aus4Innovation Partnership Grants (*) for the project “VietFruitRise: Smart Pollination Management to Improve Fruit Production in Vietnam” – marking a significant milestone as the University’s first project funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT).
VinUniversity serves as the Vietnamese Lead Entity by Assistant Professor
Thai Mai Thanh
(Principal Investigator at the Center for Environmental Intelligence and VinUni-Illinois Smart Health Center), co-leading the project with The University of Queensland, the Australian Lead Entity. Together, the partners bring interdisciplinary expertise in AI, agriculture, and environmental science to address climate pressures with data-driven innovation.
PI Dr. T. Thang Vo Doan from the University of Queensland emphasized the urgency of the challenge:
“We’re seeing shifts in flowering timing, reduced pollinator activity, and more uncertainty in fruit set. These changes are making it much harder for farmers to predict yields and manage their orchards effectively.”
At VinUniversity, Assistant Professor Thai Mai Thanh highlighted the implications for rural livelihoods:
“When pollination becomes unreliable, it directly affects both productivity and income stability. Farmers need better tools to understand what’s happening in their orchards in real time.”
With total funding of AUD 544,240 and a 19-month implementation period starting in April 2026, VietFruitRise will modernize agriculture through three key technical pillars:
AIoT Monitoring: Deploying integrated field systems to capture real-time data on pollinators, beneficial insects, flowering, and microclimate conditions tailored for durian and mango orchards in the Mekong Delta.
Predictive Analytics: Leveraging AI and advanced sensing technologies to quantify pollination risks and visitation trends, providing farmers with uncertainty-aware data for better decision-making.
Digital Advisory Platform: Delivering orchard-level advisories via a bilingual web and mobile interface, making expert technical recommendations accessible to farmers and cooperatives at any time.
Dr. Thang noted:
“Our aim is to move beyond manual observation to a more informed, data-driven approach. We want to give farmers clear, timely guidance so they can anticipate pollination risks and respond more effectively.”
Furthermore, this project is committed to equitable development. Guided by a GEDSI (Gender Equality, Disability and Social Inclusion) approach, the solution is designed to ensure that women and underserved communities can also master these technologies, helping smallholder farmers benefit directly from innovation.
Assistant Professor Thai Mai Thanh emphasized the importance of user-centered design:
“It’s not just about the technology, it’s about making sure people can use it confidently and effectively. We’re working closely with local communities to ensure the system fits their needs.”
This project exemplifies VinUniversity’s commitment to conducting high-impact, applied research that addresses critical societal challenges. Furthermore, it underscores the strength of the Australia-Vietnam partnership in leveraging science, technology, and innovation to drive sustainable agricultural development.
(*) The Aus4Innovation Partnership Grants is a key component of the Aus4Innovation program, a ten-year initiative (2018-2028) funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, co-funded and managed by CSIRO, and delivered in partnership with Vietnam’s Ministry of Science and Technology. Across five rounds, the Grants have provided over AUD $8 million in funding to support 18 projects, empowering Vietnamese and Australian institutions to address critical issues in agriculture, healthcare, environment and more, in a sustainable and inclusive manner.
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April 23, 2026
VinUni joined the Dialogue to discuss “Is Asia the World’s Next Scientific Superpower?” Insights from THE Asia Universities Summit 2026
April 2, 2026
The opening ceremony of the first intake of Vingroup 20,000 Applied AI Talent Program
March 31, 2026
From lab to life: Bridging research and clinical practice in immunology
You might
also like
See more
VinUni joined the Dialogue to discuss “Is Asia the World’s Next Scientific Superpower?” Insights from THE Asia Universities Summit 2026
The opening ceremony of the first intake of Vingroup 20,000 Applied AI Talent Program
From lab to life: Bridging research and clinical practice in immunology
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