At the close of the nomination
period for the 2026 season, the VinFuture Prize, a global science and
technology prize recorded 1,819 nominations from around the world,
supported by a network of more than 17,000 nominators spanning 117
countries and territories.
HANOI, VIETNAM -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 18 May 2026 - After six seasons, the VinFuture Prize has not only
expanded its influence in the international scientific community, but
has also affirmed its position as a prestigious global prize dedicated
to identifying and honoring breakthroughs with profound significance for
the future of humanity.
A Global Network Bringing Together More Than 17,000 Outstanding Minds
This year's VinFuture nominations span a wide range of critical fields,
including medicine and healthcare (38.4%), environmental and earth
sciences (17%), energy, transportation, and construction (15%), food and
agriculture (10.6%), as well as other scientific and technological
disciplines (19%).
At the same time, the official nominator network of the VinFuture Prize
has continued to expand substantially, reaching 17,154 nominators from
117 countries and territories across all five continents. This
represents an increase of approximately 16% compared with the 2025
season and a more than fourteenfold expansion compared with the
inaugural season in 2021. Moreover, the number of countries and
territories represented within the nominator network has nearly doubled
over the past six years.
Notably, 1,415 nominators for the 2026 VinFuture Prize are ranked among
the world's top 2% most-cited researchers. Nearly 8,000 experts are
affiliated with leading universities, research institutes, and
scientific organizations worldwide, including Australian Academy of
Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States), Stanford
University (United States), Harvard University (United States),
University of California, Berkeley (United States), University of Oxford
(United Kingdom), National University of Singapore (Singapore), Nanyang
Technological University (Singapore), and Weizmann Institute of Science
(Israel), among others.
Participating on a voluntary basis, these nominators play a vital role
in identifying and recommending outstanding scientific innovations
capable of generating meaningful and lasting improvements to the lives
of billions of people worldwide. They also contribute significantly to
extending the global reach of the VinFuture Prize within the
international scientific community and promoting cross-border academic
connections. Several distinguished nominators have traveled to Vietnam
during the 2024 and 2025 VinFuture Sci-Tech Weeks to connect and
exchange knowledge directly with the Vietnamese scientific community.
"
The continued growth in both the number of nominations and our
network of more than 17,000 nominators reflects the increasing
confidence that leading scientists and prestigious institutions around
the world place in VinFuture Prize and its mission to identify and honor
scientific and technological innovations with meaningful impact on
humanity. This momentum also reinforces our commitment to upholding
rigorous and transparent evaluation standards, while advancing a
long-term vision of connecting global intellect in pursuit of a better
future for all," said Dr. Thai-Ha Le, Managing Director of the VinFuture Foundation.
Following the conclusion of the nomination period, the Pre-Screening
Committee will begin the process of evaluating and selecting the most
outstanding scientific works for consideration by the VinFuture Prize
Council in the final judging round, which is expected to continue
through early September 2026. All nominations will undergo a rigorous
multi-layer evaluation process based on stringent international
standards to ensure the highest levels of scientific integrity,
fairness, and transparency.
The core evaluation criteria include the degree of scientific and
technological advancement, the potential for meaningful impact on human
life, as well as the scale and long-term sustainability of the proposed
innovations.
Vietnam's Growing Imprint on the Global Innovation Map
After six seasons, the VinFuture Prize has firmly established its
reputation and standing within the global science and technology
landscape. Several VinFuture Laureates have subsequently been honored by
some of the world's most prestigious scientific awards, including the
Nobel Prize, the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering, and the
Breakthrough Prize, demonstrating VinFuture's ability to recognize, at
an early stage, innovations with foundational significance for the
future of humanity.
Notable examples include Prof. Omar Yaghi (2021 VinFuture Special Prize;
2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry); Dr. Katalin Karikó and Prof. Drew
Weissman (2021 VinFuture Grand Prize; 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine); Drs. Demis Hassabis and John Jumper (2022 VinFuture Special
Prize; 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry); Prof. Geoffrey Hinton (2024
VinFuture Grand Prize; 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics); as well as Prof.
Yoshua Bengio, Prof. Yann LeCun, Prof. Geoffrey Hinton, Mr. Jensen
Huang, and Prof. Fei-Fei Li (2024 VinFuture Grand Prize; 2025 Queen
Elizabeth Prize for Engineering). Additional examples include Prof.
Daniel Drucker, Prof. Joel Habener, Prof. Jens Juul Holst, and Assoc.
Prof. Svetlana Mojsov (2023 VinFuture Special Prize), who later received
the 2025 Breakthrough Prize.
Beyond recognizing transformative scientific achievements, VinFuture has
become a point of convergence for knowledge, collaboration, and the
aspiration to serve humanity. Over the course of six seasons, VinFuture
has contributed to shaping a more open, connected, and inspiring
scientific ecosystem, while positioning Vietnam as an increasingly
important destination on the global innovation map.