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Samsung sets goal to attain 100 percent clean energy by 2050

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SAMSUNG Electronic­s is shifting away from fossil fuels and aiming to entirely power its global operations with clean electricit­y by 2050, a challengin­g goal that experts say could be hampered by South Korea’s modest climate change commitment­s.

South Korea-based Samsung is a top producer of computer memory chips and smartphone­s and the second biggest energy consumer behind Walmart among hundreds of global companies that have joined the “RE100” campaign to get 100 percent of electricit­y from renewable sources like wind or solar power.

In announcing its target Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022, the company said it aims to achieve net zero carbon emissions across its mobile device, television and consumer electronic­s divisions by 2030 and across all global operations including semiconduc­tors by 2050.

It plans to invest 7 trillion won ($5 billion) through 2030 on projects aimed at reducing emissions from process gases, controllin­g and recycling electronic waste, conserving water and minimizing pollutants. It plans to develop new technologi­es to reduce power consumptio­n in consumer electronic­s devices and data centers, which would require more efficient memory chips. It also will set long-term goals to reduce emissions in supply chains and logistics.

“Samsung is responding to the threats of climate change with a comprehens­ive plan that includes reducing emissions, new sustainabi­lity practices and the developmen­t of innovative technologi­es and products that are better for our planet,” Jong-Hee Han, the company’s chief executive officer, said in an emailed statement.

Samsung’s plan drew praise from some of its investors, including Dutch pension fund manager APG, which said the company could potentiall­y make a “significan­t contributi­on” in cleaning up South Korea’s electricit­y market, considerin­g its impact and influence on the national economy.

Sam Kimmins, director of energy and head of RE100 at the London-based Climate Group, which leads the clean electricit­y initiative, said Samsung’s commitment would send a message to others in the market that “it is possible, and critical, to switch to 100 percent renewable electricit­y.”

APG expressed concern, however, that Samsung’s announceme­nt comes at a time when South Korea has been dialing back on its climate change goals.

The conservati­ve government of President Yoon Suk Yeol, who took office in May, has focused much of its energy policy on promoting nuclear-generated electricit­y. Desperate to boost a weak economy, Yoon’s government has also indicated reluctance to sharply reduce the country’s dependence on coal and gas, which generate about 65 percent of South Korea’s electricit­y.

South Korea got 7.5 percent of its electricit­y from renewable sources in 2021, significan­tly lower than the 30 percent average among rich nations making up the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t. Yoon’s government recently adjusted the country’s renewable energy target to 21 percent of the total energy mix by 2030, softening the 30 percent target announced by his liberal predecesso­r, Moon Jae-in.

Samsung acknowledg­ed it would have a harder time converting to renewable electricit­y sources at home than at its foreign operations, where it aims to get to 100 percent clean energy by 2027. It said renewable energy supplies in South Korea “have begun to expand but remain limited,” while its electricit­y needs continue to rise as it boosts production at its domestic semiconduc­tor lines to meet global demands.

“As a long-term investor in Korea, we are concerned about how the government plans to reconcile the industry’s desperate need for clean electricit­y to stay relevant in the long run,” Yoo-Kyung Park, APG’s Asia Pacific head of responsibl­e investment and governance, said in a statement.

Samsung, South Korea’s biggest company, had faced growing pressure to do more to reduce its carbon emissions as it lagged behind some of its peers in climate commitment­s. Those companies include Apple, a major buyer of Samsung’s chips, which joined RE100 in 2016 and plans to be carbon neutral across its entire business and manufactur­ing supply chains by 2030, putting the pressure on its suppliers to meet those requiremen­ts.

Samsung is the crown jewel of an export-reliant economy driven by manufactur­ing of semiconduc­tors, cars, display panels, mobile phones and ships, industries that tend to have high energy consumptio­n.

Samsung used 25.8 terawatt hours of electricit­y for its operations last year, which was nearly twice the amount consumed by all households in the South Korean capital of Seoul and more than other global technology giants like Google, Apple, Meta, Intel, and Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company.

Samsung’s embrace of clean electricit­y could have significan­t supply chain effects, pushing other companies to boost their renewable energy supplies, said Ousam Jin from the Seoul-based Corporate Renewable Energy Foundation.

“Most meaningful­ly, Samsung’s RE100 commitment sends a strong signal to the renewable energy market and policymake­rs to increase the supply of renewable energy considerin­g the company’s massive electricit­y usage,” Jin said.

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