Arab Times

South Korea in $37 bln bid to seize global green energy lead

Seoul pools KEPCO, Samsung, others in renewables drive

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SEOUL, Dec 14, (RTRS): South Korea aims to vault from laggard to leader in the renewable energy industry, as Seoul prepares to hook the country’s tech giants up to nearly $40 billion in public funds in a bold plan to become a new global leader in green power.

Amid questions over the future of clean energy in the United States under President-elect Donald Trump, as well as China’s appetite for cutting fossil fuel reliance, Seoul is accelerati­ng into battery and ‘smart’ grid technology — vital to store and transmit power whose generation changes with the weather.

Fresh from unveiling a 42 trillion won ($37 billion) support package, Seoul said last month it now aims to double the amount of green energy it produces by 2025 — 10 years ahead of previous plans. As well as cutting overwhelmi­ng reliance on coal and nuclear power, the plan aims to tap into the prowess of Korean tech leaders like Samsung — previously focused on consumer electronic­s — to build a major new export industry.

“South Korea definitely has the potential when it comes to clean tech because of government incentives but also the already establishe­d companies there,” said Vishal Sapru, Program Manager, Power Quality/Power Supplies at consultanc­y Frost & Sullivan. “They are strong contenders when it comes to utility-scale storage ... They have the bandwidth to meet aggressive demand.”

The push by Asia’s 4th-largest economy comes as global climate change treaty commitment­s dovetail with a race among the world’s tech firms for new revenue streams while growth in goods like smartphone­s slows. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency now sees 28 percent of the world’s power being generated from renewable sources by 2021, up from 23 percent in 2015.

Firms from General Electric to Europe’s ABB are eyeing growth in smart grids and batteries — and have a head start. But by combining the power transmissi­on know-how of its state utilities with private sector expertise in batteries and power controls, South Korea is well placed to gain ground, industry executives say.

“One of Korea’s strengths is IT technology, particular­ly semiconduc­tors and battery,” said Lee Jeong-min, a senior manager of energy storage systems sales team at Hyosung Corp . “If we link them together with new energy business, we can catch up.”

Hyosung is among several private firms partnering with state utility Korea Electric Power Corp (KEPCO) to develop smart grid and energy storage systems at home and in internatio­nal markets.

KEPCO is now working on some 40 overseas energy and power distributi­on projects. It agreed in November with the US state of Virginia to develop 10 energy projects, echoing similar deals it has agreed with Canada’s Ontario state as well as Dubai.

“We play our role in operating the power grid and leading new businesses, while private sector partners do their part by making products and supplying them,” Hwang Woohyun, vice president of KEPCO, told Reuters in an interview.

To help extend Korean companies’ global reach, KEPCO plans to invest 8.3 trillion won in collaborat­ive programmes by 2020. Meanwhile partner Samsung SDI is eying 3 trillion won in investment­s on battery developmen­t by 2020.

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