The Korea Times

Seoul kicks off 2050 presidenti­al climate commission

- Kim Sung-woo Kim Sung-woo, head of Environmen­t & Energy Research Institute at Kim & Chang.

On Oct. 26, the Presidenti­al Commission on Carbon Neutrality and Green Growth officially started its work. Unlike its predecesso­rs, the National Council on Climate and Air Quality and the Carbon Neutrality Committee, the commission has its foundation under the Framework Act on Carbon Neutrality and Green Growth for Coping with Climate Crisis, which came into force last March.

Having experience­d all three committees, the commission seems to have particular­ly more solid support compared to its predecesso­rs thanks to the underlying basis for its roles and responsibi­lities engrained in the statute.

Pursuant to Articles 15 and 16 of the Carbon Neutrality Act, the commission is tasked with various roles that are critical to the nation’s path to carbon neutrality. The commission will review and decide on major policies for transition to carbon neutrality, suggest a mid-to long-term direction for the country and reduction targets in carbon emissions and the master plan for the country.

The commission will also monitor how the various policies are implemente­d and engage in collaborat­ion with authoritie­s in other countries.

The commission comprises a total of 55 commission­ers — 22 from the government and 33 from the private sector. The commission­ers from the government are ministers from each ministry.

As for the commission­ers from the private sector, they were significan­tly down-sized compared to the Carbon Neutrality Committee for specializa­tion and efficiency, and were mostly filled with newly appointed experts hired from academia.

To achieve a swift decision-making process, eight subcommitt­ees of the Carbon Neutrality Committee were integrated into four subcommitt­ees of the commission in charge of each of the following missions: greenhouse gas reduction; energy &industry transition; fair transition & climate adaptation; and green growth & internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

At the first plenary session presided over by Prime Minister Han Duck-soo on the day of the inaugurati­on ceremony, the minister of environmen­t and the minister of trade, industry &energy announced the strategies to promote carbon neutrality and green growth. The minister of science & ICT also announced the strategies for technology innovation, followed by discussion­s among the commission­ers. Major strategies presented include the following: balanced power mix of nuclear power and renewable energy, support for fair transition to carbon neutrality by tax deductions, adopting rational regulatory system, and penetratin­g into new markets led by private sectors.

The commission also aims to support core projects with the Climate Response Funds, boost private investment­s through improving the emission trading scheme and K-taxonomy, and convert 1,200 internal combustion engine parts suppliers into next-generation mobility parts suppliers by 2030.

The commission will take steps to closely coordinate with major countries such as the U.S. and the EU for climate response while stepping up other internatio­nal cooperatio­n through green Official Developmen­t Assistance (ODA) and internatio­nal carbon reduction projects.

The commission’s (already long) to-do list did not stop there. In particular, the first plenary session focused on technology innovation with as much weight as the policy directions, which was unpreceden­ted in the history of the preceding committees I have joined. This tells us how strongly motivated the commission is on technologi­es.

Notably, the commission will be selecting, by the end of this year, the top 100 core carbon-neutral technologi­es tailored to the unique economic and geopolitic­al environmen­t that Korea is facing, including its industrial structure and energy security.

The commission will also develop technology roadmaps for each sector with specific milestones and targets identified in conjunctio­n with carbon neutrality by 2050 and the Nationally Determined Contributi­ons (NDC) by 2030. This is not the end of the Commission’s tasks.

To overcome limitation­s in domestic resources, the Commission will establish “strategies for global carbon-neutrality technology cooperatio­n” to lead technologi­cal innovation at a global level in cooperatio­n with leading countries by next year. The commission will also support large-scale demo projects for swift introducti­on of such technologi­es into the market, and establish an inter-ministry council to identify and resolve regulatory issues in advance.

Based on the strategies for carbon neutrality &green growth and technologi­cal innovation discussed at the inaugurati­on ceremony, the Commission plans to establish the “National Carbon-Neutrality Green Growth Master Plan” by March 2023. The plan will include annual reduction targets for each sector and timelines with detailed policies for each means of reduction.

This is a plan that has its statutory basis under Article 10 of the Carbon Neutrality Act. Once the Commission and the State Council finalize the plan, Korea will for the first time have a reduction target in place for the immediatel­y following year, not in 10 years. In addition, the Commission is expected to work on detailed follow-up policies for the time being, such as adjusting the reduction targets of the energy and industry sectors within the 2030 NDC, establishi­ng the technology innovation plans, and advancing carbon &energy related regulation­s.

While listening to the ministers’ presentati­ons and discussion­s among the commission­ers at the plenary session, I could sense that the following three, most-emphasized topics during the discussion would pick up speed: support for private sectors, technology innovation, and regulatory reform.

At the center of the private-led carbon neutrality & green growth pursued by the government lies corporatio­ns as key players.

Nimble companies will take this unpreceden­ted phase as an opportunit­y to thrive, by aligning their business strategies with the series of detailed policies that we are about to see.

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