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Country report
Mar 2023
Strategies for Coal Transition in Korea
…on Korea’s clean energy transition from coal in the power sector. The report covers a detailed review of policy and market developments around Korea’s transition to net zero. The scope of the report includes all sectors of the economy, industry and all the regions across the world, where we extract the main recommendations that are applicable to the case of Korea.Currently, the power sector is the largest CO2-emitting sector and coal is the single biggest source of CO2 emissions, as it is the backbone of many electricity systems. Thus, coal power plants have been a target…
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Article
07 Mar 2023
Korea Electricity Security Policy
Country Energy Security Policy - Electricity Overview and generation portfolio Electricity generation in Korea is heavily dependent on coal, which represents over 40% of total generation. The vast majority of the remaining electricity generation derives from natural gas and nuclear energy, in roughly equal shares. Renewable energies account for a growing but still small proportion, and are expected to reach 21.6% of total electricity generation by 2030. Korea’s power grid is an isolated system with no cross-border transmission lines; therefore, electricity demand is met entirely through local production. Korea has an electricity emergency response manual outlining response procedures…
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Article
07 Mar 2023
Korea Natural Gas Security Policy
…publicly-owned natural gas company established by the Korean government. KOGAS holds emergency gas reserves which can be released to meet demand when supply is constrained while demand restraint measures and fuel switching can be utilised once emergency stocks reach low levels.Natural gas accounts for a significant proportion of Korea’s energy mix with consumption on an upward trajectory for over two decades. Gas consumption is set to grow further due to government plans to increase gas-fired power generation as a partial replacement for coal. With limited domestic reserves, the vast majority of Korea’s gas consumption is…
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Article
07 Mar 2023
Korea Oil Security Policy
Country Energy Security Policy - Oil Oil overview The use of emergency oil stocks is central to Korea’s emergency response policy. Korea meets its stockholding obligation to the IEA by holding government stocks and by placing a minimum stockholding obligation on industry. Demand restraint measures can also be implemented during severe emergencies. Oil remains the most significant energy source in Korea in terms of total energy supply. Oil consumption has generally trended upwards since the late 2000s, with demand for naphtha being particularly strong due to Korea’s large petrochemicals industry. Korea has a very significant refining industry and is…