Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Dukgeun Ahn chaired a conference on May 16 at the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) in Seoul with renewable energy generator, manufacturer, and buyer companies and announced the strategy on widening renewable energy distribution and strengthening the supply chain.
In step with the global shifts, the Korean government has been making effort to expand renewable energy by balancing out the utilization of nuclear, hydrogen, and other carbon-free energy sources. Moreover, it has also concentrated on solving issues arising in the process of expanding renewable energy distribution, such as those concerning electric power systems and cost, in order to nurture an environment suitable for the sustainable distribution of renewable energy.
As a result, the energy market ecosystem has been showing signs of recovery, and the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) intends to push a more orderly expansion for the renewable energy market. First, the Government will be taking up a leading role in the distribution process. For offshore wind power development, laws on providing state support for site location, licensing, and local consensus building are to be swiftly put in place. For solar power, public demonstration projects and regulatory improvements will be rolled out with focus on agrivoltaics and around industrial complexes to reduce challenges in local consensus building and electric power system capacity.
In line with domestic distribution expansion, preemptive efforts will be made to bolster the overall industrial base. Through widening and strengthening the competitive tendering of solar and wind power facilities, supply chain and security factors will be thoroughly addressed. Moreover, early securing of next-generation technology is another key task for future market dominance. By tackling technology development issues and strengthening support for shared infrastructure utilization, Korea aims to achieve early commercialization of tandem solar cells by 2026 and 35 percent efficiency rate by 2030.
The Government also plans to lower public burden while strengthening the state’s role in renewable energy supply by improving the renewable portfolio standards (RPS) program in accordance with market and policy landscape changes through extensive discussions with the National Assembly, industries, and experts on the subject. Furthermore, power purchasing regulations will be eased and transaction convenience enhanced to expand the market for companies’ direct power purchases from renewable energy power generators, while opening separate brokerage markets on the side.
Stronger support will go towards companies looking to penetrate overseas renewable energy markets. Korean firms have won a total of 41 overseas renewable energy projects over the last four years, worth USD 14.3 billion and equivalent to 20.4GW. The Government plans to establish a cooperative system between companies and assisting institutions, while launching locally tailored support programs as well.
MOTIE will be designing follow-up policies with other related ministries per each specific task and continue to seek measures for nurturing a balanced energy mix development plan among renewable energy and other carbon-free energy sources like nuclear and hydrogen.