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Feb 25, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
RENEWABLE ENERGY PUSH
Last year, KEPCO's operating expenses shot up by 12 trillion won on-year to 66.4 trillion won, hit by fuel cost hikes.
President Moon Jae-in's nuclear phase-out policy, one of his key campaign policies, pushed KEPCO to shift toward more expensive renewable energy and liquefied natural gas.
The permanent shutdown of Wolsong nuclear power plant's first unit in South Korea in 2018, four years earlier than planned, raised energy costs for the utility.
Renewable energy took a 9% share of KEPCO's energy sources as of end-2021, versus 7% a year earlier.
SALES, DEBT
Electricity demand picked up sharply with the expansion of the electric vehicle market. But its operating loss snowballed since it was unable to pass on the higher fuel costs to consumers for most of the past eight years.
KEPCO's revenue expanded by around 2 trillion won to 60.6 trillion won on-year in 2021.
Wholesale power price, or the power price that KEPCO pays to public and private power generators to buy electricity, skyrocketed 118.6% on-year as of end-January.
To cover the shortfalls, KEPCO has issued debts. It raised 2.4 trillion won in domestic debt last month, followed by 1.9 trillion won in debt issued so far this month.
"The energy market is now in a serious condition equivalent to the oil crisis we experienced before," said Konkuk University's electrical engineering professor Park Jong-bae
"The government should implement every policy and market measure needed to save electricity."
Write to Zi-Hoon Lee at lizi@hankyung.com
Yeonhee Kim edited this article
Feb 07, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
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