Sunday, 29 Sep 2024

South Korea's Moon urges citizens to support ambitious carbon neutrality goal

SEOUL (REUTERS) – South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Thursday (Dec 10) urged citizens to work together towards a greener economy and vowed to support low-carbon technologies in an address aimed at rallying citizens behind his pledge to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.

Mr Moon was speaking after the release this week of a broad plan to achieve that goal by taking a more proactive approach towards greenhouse gas reduction than the adaptive path the country is currently pursuing.

It is an ambitious step for South Korea, one of the world’s most fossil-fuel reliant economies, where coal makes up 40 per cent of the country’s electricity mix and renewable power less than 6 per cent.

“We have to reduce energy transition costs through technological advancement. The government will provide firm support so that our signature technologies can lead the world and become future growth engines,” Mr Moon said in a televised speech, wearing a tie made of fabrics from plastic waste.

“Before it is too late, let’s start right now.”

The authorities on Monday said they plan on shifting the country’s industry from fossil fuels to a renewable based system.

They also want to expedite their goal of having 1.13 million electric vehicles (EVs) and 200,000 hydrogen cars on the roads by 2025, up from 91,000 and 5,000 each at the end of 2019, while ensuring the 20 million households nationwide have access to charging batteries at home.

Mr Moon pledged to spend eight trillion won (S$9.8 billion) on an earlier announced “Green New Deal” aimed at creating jobs and economic recovery from the coronavirus fallout that includes remodelling public buildings, creating urban forests, and creating low-carbon energy industrial complexes.

A survey by pollster Realmeter this week showed 42.4 per cent of the public agreed that carbon neutrality should be expedited ahead of 2050, while 28.7 per cent said the goal was early enough.

Environmental groups had welcomed the commitment by Asia’s fourth-biggest economy to reach net-zero emissions and hoped the country’s industry would swiftly shift from fossil fuels to a 100 per cent renewable-based system.

In November, during a call with US President-elect Joe Biden, Mr Moon vowed to promote economic relations with the United States by building a carbon neutral economy.

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