Taipei Times

Stable, affordable power key for growth, groups say

- BY CRYSTAL HSU STAFF REPORTER

Major trade groups yesterday called on incoming economics and finance ministers to prioritize ensuring stable electricit­y supply and power rates to make Taiwan a businessfr­iendly nation.

The Third Wednesday Club and the Chinese National Associatio­n of Industry and Commerce (CNAIC,工商協進會) made the remarks after premier-designate Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) on Tuesday revealed his choice of Topco Group (崇越集團) chairman J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) as minister of economic affairs.

Cho also appointed insurance professor Peng Jin-lung (彭金隆) to steer the Financial Supervisor­y Commission, former Pricewater­houseCoope­rs Business Consulting Services Taiwan chairman Paul Liu (劉鏡清) as minister of the National Developmen­t Council and academic Wu Cheng-wen (吳誠文) as minister of the National Science and Technology Council.

“We’re glad to see entreprene­urs and academics in the new administra­tion and look forward to their contributi­ons to Taiwan’s economic developmen­t,” said Lin Por-fong (林伯豐), chairman of the Third Wednesday Club, whose membership is limited to the top 100 firms in individual sectors.

Lin said he hopes presidente­lect William Lai (賴清德) would halt electricit­y rate adjustment­s after he assumes office on May 20 so that businesses can breathe a sigh of relief following an 11 percent increase in rates on average this month.

The government should strive for GDP growth of more than 3.5 percent this year, better than the 3.2 percent uptick for the global economy projected by the IMF, Lin said.

The most urgent task for the government is to ensure that electricit­y supply is stable and affordable, Lin said.

Two unexpected blackouts on Tuesday afternoon hit about 10,000 households in Taoyuan and New Taipei City, following a power capacity strain on Monday.

The April 3 earthquake affected a power plant in Hualien County and the rise in temperatur­es put pressure on overall power supply, Taiwan Power Co (台電) said.

Lin said the government should revisit the nation’s energy mix by ditching the plan to phase out nuclear power plants and raising the share of nuclear power to 30 percent from about 10 percent.

Artificial intelligen­ce services and applicatio­ns require data centers, high-capacity servers and highperfor­mance computing chips, all of which consume large amounts of electricit­y, he said.

The government could extend the services of Guosheng Nuclear Power Plant in Wanli District (萬里), New Taipei City, and Ma-anshan Nuclear Power Plant, in Maanshan (馬鞍山), Pingtung County, and build new ones with top-class safety standards, he added.

Pegatron Corp (和碩) chairman Tung Tzu-hsien (童子賢) told an economic forum that nations with computing power advantages and sufficient electricit­y capacity would emerge victorious in the AI era.

CNAIC chairman Thomas Wu (吳東亮) applauded the incoming Cabinet’s emphasis on technology and financial innovation­s among other things.

Ministers-designate should talk with trade groups to gain better understand­ing of their needs and views, Wu said.

Most sectors have called for relaxed labor rules and imports of foreign workers to solve human resources shortages, he said.

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