Our wide-ranging investigation into the Vietnamese EV manufacturer relied on satellite imagery, AIS data, trade records, and on-the-ground reporting in multiple U.S. states and continents.
Vinfast, launched in 2017, is a Vietnam-based EV manufacturer. In the US, it sells the VF8, an electric SUV built outside of Haiphong.
The company went public in the US in 2023, initially soaring to a $200 billion market capitalization, but its value has since fallen 95%.
First, we had to find the transport link that Vinfast used to move its cars from Vietnam to the US. They may have made that just a bit easy.
Vinfast’s RO/RO car carrier, the Silver Queen:
We tracked the Silver Queen as it made three trips to the US, discovering that it was unloading Vinfast EVs at a local port facility in Benicia, California. So we went to take a look.
They were still there, months after the last delivery.
Based on our investigation, Vinfast brought a total number of 3,118 cars to the US. From January to December 2023, they sold 265, according to registration data.
Vinfast has pledged to bring $4 billion in investment and 7,500 new jobs to North Carolina with a massive new EV plant.
This is the progress the plant has made — the project was announced two years ago:
In contrast, a few hours south, Hyundai is building a $5.5 billion EV manufacturing plant in Georgia. Both initially planned to be in operation in 2025.
Vinfast’s remains largely a muddy hole, while Hyundai will start churning out cars later this year.
“We continue to make progress on our proposed North Carolina manufacturing site,” a VinFast spokesperson told Hunterbrook Media, saying the company’s plan “remains to complete principal construction on the site before the end of 2025.”
Currently, Vinfast sells most of its vehicles to other companies owned by its parent company Vingroup. Electric taxi company Green and Smart Mobility (GSM) operates a fleet of bright blue Vinfast EVs.
In February, a blogger posted a video on YouTube of a giant field in Thái Nguyên, filled with hundreds of idle blue Vinfast vehicles that appeared to belong to GSM.
The video was quickly taken down, but we had a single good screenshot.
We found the field.
A massive thanks to the Bellingcat Discord server, several members of which helped us find the lot in just a couple of hours.
We also discovered another lot outside of Ho Chi Minh City, filled with hundreds of additional unused blue GSM Vinfast EVs.
Additionally, the Ho Chi Minh City storage lot had several Google reviews with attached high-quality photos both from outside and within the facility.
Earlier tonight, Ukrainian drones successfully hit the Russian Novo Bryanskaya 750kv substation in Vygonichi, Bryansk Oblast.
The substation is currently ablaze.
"After a UAV attack, a substation in Vygonichi, Bryansk region, caught fire. According to the testimony of local residents (they share videos on social networks), before the fire, 5-6 explosions were heard, and air defense was operating in the air."
The House is planning to vote on the Ukraine, Israel, and Indo-Pacific aid bills on Saturday.
Big elements of the Ukraine aid bill as it stands today:
$13.7 billion in USAI money, $633 million for DOD-led research and development, and $34 billion for DOD expenses/procurement.
$7.9 billion for economic support
$300 million for the Ukrainian State Border Guard and National Police
$100 million for ‘‘Nonproliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining, and Related Programs’’
$9.6 billion for the Foreign Military Financing Program
SEC. 505. (a) TRANSFER OF LONG-RANGE ATACMS REQUIRED
"As soon as practicable after the date of enactment of this Act, the President shall transfer long range Army Tactical Missile Systems to the Government of Ukraine"
Kherson Oblast, a Ukrainian Backfire K1 fixed wing bomber drone from the Angry Birds unit drops a pair of bomblets on a Russian Pantsir-S1, scoring a hit and setting fire to the SAM system.
Strike location (46.579437, 33.188713)
The Angry Birds unit went public in 2023 with its Backfire K1, a catapult-launched fixed-wing bomber drone with a payload of 6 kg.
Some breaking news on my end: three months ago, I joined Hunterbrook Media, a publication doing investigations in a new way, combining OSINT with on-the-ground reporting.
Hunterbrook Media publishes investigative and global reporting—with no ads or paywalls.
Our mission is to bring visibility to under-covered regions and accountability to under-scrutinized sectors. (2/15)
Under the hood, here is why we are different:
1. We rely as much as possible on publicly available and accessible information, driven by OSINT methodologies.
2. We don’t monetize eyeballs but the information we find itself — capturing the economic value of world-class reporting, which we believe for too long has gone to everyone except the people producing it. (3/15)