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South Korea, a green growth model

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by Staff Writers
Seoul (UPI) Jan 27, 2011
South Korea's national policy on green growth is seen as a model in green-powered development, experts say.

"I want to put forward 'Low Carbon, Green Growth' as the core of the Republic's (South Korea) new vision," South Korean President Lee Myung- bak said in an August 2008 speech on the country's 60th anniversary.

Seoul announced the "Green New Deal" in January 2009 as part of a national stimulus package to invest $38.5 billion from 2009 to 2012 in nine key environmental projects, projected to create 956,000 jobs in the green sector.

The following month, Seoul launched the National Strategy for Green Growth, in which the government pledged to spend $84.5 billion, or 2 percent of gross domestic product each year, on green growth by 2013.

Seoul aims to cut carbon emissions by 30 percent from a 2020 forecast, or a 4 percent reduction from 2005 levels.

"They put their money where their mouth is," Alex Bowen, a research fellow at the London School of Economics' Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment told SolveClimate News. "I think there is a political head of steam," he said, for other countries to follow suit.

In June, South Korea established the Global Green Growth Institute, an international research arm that aims to develop and model theories of green growth for worldwide use, headed by former Prime Minister Han Seung-soo.

The government said it would contribute $10 million a year for the next three years to the institute. Seoul plans to open GGGI regional offices in five countries, including China and Brazil, and establish it as an international organization by 2012.

So far the institute has selected Indonesia, Brazil and Ethiopia as beneficiaries of its support programs for green growth planning.

On the sidelines of U.N. climate talks in Cancun, Mexico, in December, Denmark became the first foreign government to join the GGGI, pledging to invest $5 million in the initiative each year for the next three years.

China, India and other emerging economies "think that greening their economies is not a choice anymore," said Jung Tae-yong, executive director of the Global Green Growth Institute and a former economist at the Asian Development Bank. Instead, Jung said, a green growth policy is now crucial "to survive in these competitive economic conditions."

Korea, Asia's fourth-largest energy consumer, relies on imports for 95 percent of its energy.

"For us, energy security is very important," Jung said.



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