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"Green New Deal" For South Korea: $38.1 Billion

01/ 6/09 08:40 AM ET   AP

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SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea said Tuesday it will invest 50 trillion won ($38.1 billion) over the next four years on environmental projects in a "Green New Deal" to spur slumping economic growth and create nearly a million jobs.

"We are in an unprecedented global economic crisis," Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said in a statement. "We must respond to the situation in an urgent manner."

Energy conservation, recycling, carbon reduction, flood prevention, development around the country's four main rivers and maintaining forest resources are among projects to be pursued under the plan, approved at a Cabinet meeting.

Han said the government's "Green New Deal Job Creation Plan" will create 960,000 new jobs, with 140,000 of those realized this year.

Trade-dependent South Korea is looking for ways to boost its slowing economy as global demand wanes for traditional mainstay goods such as automobiles and technological products.

Exports fell 17.4 percent in December from the same month the year before, following a drop of 18.3 percent in November, according to government figures. Unemployment, though still at a relatively low 3.1 percent, is expected to rise.

Amid deteriorating conditions, some private economists say Asia's fourth-largest economy is facing the possibility in 2009 of suffering its first contraction on an annual basis since 1997, when it was in the throes of the Asian economic crisis.

South Korea's central bank is more optimistic, saying last month that the economy will grow 2 percent in 2009, compared with a revised estimate of 3.7 percent growth or 2008. The economy expanded 5 percent in 2007.

President Lee Myung-bak said last month that South Korea's economy may shrink in the first half of next year due to fallout from the global financial crisis but may still attain a positive figure for the year.

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SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea said Tuesday it will invest 50 trillion won ($38.1 billion) over the next four years on environmental projects in a "Green New Deal" to spur slumping economic gr...
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea said Tuesday it will invest 50 trillion won ($38.1 billion) over the next four years on environmental projects in a "Green New Deal" to spur slumping economic gr...
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02:40 PM on 01/06/2009
South Korea is already way ahead of the US because they have generous feed in tariff policies so that people who produce clean energy on their ALREADY DEVELOPED LAND (like rooftops) can get PAID for it. We have to give it to the utilities for free. Why?

It is now more urgent than ever that we implement SUCCESSFUL energy policies like guaranteed loans, feed in tariffs and point of use solutions, so Big Energy is not able to slaughter millions more acres of our beautiful, functioning ecosystems for solar and wind we can more efficiently generate at point of use. you cannot call something "renewable" if it permanently destroys 10,000 acres of fragile carbon sink...
11:45 AM on 01/06/2009
This is great news for South Korea and the rest fo the region, for new investment and technology to help the Chinese and others into a new greener future less dependent on unsustainable energy resources in an unsustainable region like the middle East. Maybe this is a signal that the UN with Ban Ki Moon (?) as its current leader, hailing from South Korea, is ready to step up on a new international climate treaty following Kyoto