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Korea braces for electricity shortage

By Korea Herald
Published : Nov. 28, 2011 - 20:00

President Lee Myung-bak

Lee leads drive to avert possible blackouts in winter



President Lee Myung-bak on Monday stressed the need for public participation in the government’s drive to save electricity as the nation braces for power shortages this winter.

He urged Koreans to lower thermostat settings, switch off unneeded lights and install energy-efficient appliances in their homes and offices.

“Although the government has drawn up measures to cope with the looming electricity crunch, I’d like to make an urgent request for your participation,” Lee said during his biweekly radio address.

“There are various ways to save electricity in daily life. Recently, I started wearing thermal underwear after lowering the room temperature. Though it felt a bit bulky at first, now I feel very warm and comfortable.”

Lee’s remarks come on the heels of the government’s push to stabilize power supplies for this winter in efforts to forestall the recurrence of blackouts that swept across the nation in mid-September amid an unseasonable heat wave.

The Ministry of Knowledge Economy unveiled a set of measures early this month, including a 10 percent demand cut for large manufacturers and caps on maximum temperatures for commercial buildings and the use of neon signs.

Still, the ministry is wrestling to keep its reserves above the safety threshold of 4 million kilowatts, forecasting demand spirals between the second and third weeks of January.

“The government has been doing its best to boost supplies through power plant construction and other schemes. It’s still a formidable task to keep up with skyrocketing demand,” Lee said, adding that Korea’s electricity consumption is increasing at a much faster clip than that for economic growth.

In recent years, winter demand has topped peak summer demand chiefly due to prolonged cold spells and upbeat economic activity, he noted, warning against another possible outage that could instigate “inconceivable damage.”

In mid-January this year, power failure broke out at the country’s largest petrochemical complex in Yeosu, South Jeolla Province, as demand shot up to a record high of 73.14 million kilowatts.

Though the blackout went on for up to 23 minutes, some factories could not resume operations for at least 10 hours, incurring more than 70 billion won ($60.7 million) in combined losses for 26 companies including GS Caltex Co., Korea’s No. 2 refiner.

In the case of September’s brownouts, the peak demand was 67.26 million kilowatts. Nearly 9,000 individuals and businesses filed damage claims worth 61 billion won collectively.

To drum up public participation, the ministry said it would launch power-saving campaigns nationwide and send alerts via television networks, social networking services and text messages if the reserves breach the bottom line.

It also launched a website (www.powersave.or.kr) on Monday to provide citizens with energy-saving tips and demand and supply levels in real time.

Citing Japan’s electricity-saving efforts following a nuclear crisis early this year and Korea’s gold collection drive at the height of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, Lee called for voluntary and active involvement.

“We can do better than Japan if we want to,” he said. “There was no other country than Korea in the world that voluntarily embarked on such movement in the wake of a financial crisis.”

By Shin Hyon-hee (heeshin@heraldcorp.com)

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