The Phnom Penh Post

Trans-Korea pipeline project requires an ‘economic approach’

- Shin Ji-hye

THE two Koreas and Russia should take an economic – not political – approach to the trans-Korea gas pipeline project to make the idea feasible, said the chief of the Korea Energy Economics Institute (KEEI) at a forum on Friday.

“As for the gas pipeline project, South Korea, North Korea and Russia have different interests and calculatio­ns,” said Cho Yong-sung, president of the KEEI, in a keynote speech during a forum, titled Trans-Korea Gas Pipeline Project: Enhancing Regional Cooperatio­n, hosted by Daesung Group in Seoul.

“However, to see a pipeline dream come true, they need to take a more economic approach rather than a political approach,” he said.

The trans-Korea gas pipeline project aims to supply natural gas from Russia to South Korea by constructi­ng a pipeline through North Korea.

Talks between South Korea and Russia began around two decades ago under the Kim Dae-Jung administra­tion, but the project has not seen

progress, as tensions on the Korean Peninsula remain unresolved.

Aside from geopolitic­al hurdles, the implementa­tion of the project faces challenges as the three nations involved appear to have different ideas, Cho said.

The North is more interested in direct economic benefits than improved inter-Korean relations. On the other hand, the South expects a thaw in relations through the project as well as economic benefits in its energy sector. For its part, Russia appears to want to expand its influence on the Korean Peninsula alongside economic benefits.

‘Chance to become reality’

Daesung Group chairman Kim Young-hoon expressed regret that the project has not seen progress for decades due to political obstacles. He hoped the project would be achieved one day to become the touchstone of energy and economic cooperatio­n in Northeast Asia.

Second Vice Foreign Minister Lee Tae-ho, who a lso attended the forum, said the production and

Daesung Group chairman Kim Young-hoon gives an opening speech at the forum in Seoul on Friday.

Cooperatio­n

transporta­tion of pipeline gas have been slow due to geographic­al and political factors. But the gas pipeline project has “a chance to become reality in the future” if the North is ready to denucleari­se and peace is achieved in the two Koreas.

During the conference, experts from South Korea, Russia and Japan examined the rapidly changing global gas market and the feasibilit­y of constructi­ng a gas pipeline from Russia through the Korean Peninsula.

The conference also looked at Trans-KoreaGasPi­pelineProj­ect:EnhancingR­egional changes in the positions of nations, such as Korea, Russia, China and Japan, due to market fluctuatio­ns sparked by the increase in US natural gas exports and the rise of piped natural gas trade between Russia and China.

During the first session, Roman Samsonov, vice president of Samara University, Ryo Fukushima, general manager of the global business planning department of Tokyo Gas, and Andrei Lankov, professor at Kookmin University presented their views on the global natural gas market and

prospects for piped natural gas in Russia and Northeast Asia.

During the second session, Ryu Jichul, director of the Future Energy Strategy Research Cooperativ­e, Lee Sung-kyu, leader of the northern energy cooperatio­n team at the Korea Energy Economics Institute, and Ahn Se-hyun, professor at the University of Seoul, presented their views on the measures necessary to get the Trans-Korea and Russia gas pipeline in operation.

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