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South Korea FAQs
South Korea has 18 nuclear plants in operation and 8-10 more are expected to be built by 2015. Overall, nuclear energy constitutes 29.9 per cent of the energy produced in South Korea. Korea links from IAEA * Ministry of Science and Technology * Ministry of Commerce, Industry & Energy * Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute * Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety * Korea Cancer Center Hospital(KCCH) * Korea Electric Power Corporation * Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co. Ltd. * Doosan Heavy Industries and Construction Co. * Korea Power Engineering Co., Inc. * Korea Nuclear Fuel Co., Ltd. (KNFC) * Korea Plant Services and Engineering Co., Ltd. * Korea Basic Science Institute * Korean Super conducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) * Korea Institute of Energy Research * Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) * Pohang University of Science and Technology * Pohang Accelerator Laboratory * Korea Nuclear Information System * Organization for Korea Atomic Energy Awareness (OKAEA) * Korea Atomic Industrial Forum
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South Korea news
See more recent South Korea news December 31, 2011 * [North Korea-South Korea] N. Korea reiterates 'no dealing' with S. Korea's conservative gov't, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea-South Korea] North Korea condemns South Korea, vows no policy changes, Chico Harlan, Washington Post (via Nevada ANP) December 30, 2011 * [North Korea-South Korea] N. Korea vows not to deal with S. Korea's president, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) December 29, 2011 * [npp-South Korea] South Korea is keen on building new reactors, UPI (via NEI email) * [North Korea-South Korea-US] Senior U.S. diplomat to visit S. Korea early next month, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) December 28, 2011 * [North Korea/South Korea] S Korea's top nuclear envoy visits U.S. over DPRK issues, Xinhua News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea/US] S. Korean nuclear envoy heads to Washington for talks on N. Korea, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea/US/Japan] S. Korea, U.S., Japan planning to hold post-Kim talks next month, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) December 27, 2011 * [npp-newbuild-South Korea] South Korea identifies possible reactor locations, Sangim Han, Bloomberg, (via NEI email) * [npp-South Korea] South Korea Has 18,593 MW of Nuclear Capacity Online, Sungwoo Park, Bloomberg (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea] South Korean mourning delegation meets wih late Kim Jong Il's heir, AP (via front page story in Roswell Daily Record) * [North Korea/South Korea] S. Koreans meet NK successor, Kim Young-jin, Korea Times, front page top story * [North Korea/South Korea/China] S. Korea, China put top priority on stability in N. Korea, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea/US] S. Korean envoy to visit U.S. to discuss Kim death, nuclear talks, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea/US] Top Nuclear Envoy From South Korea to Visit U.S. Tomorrow on North Issues, Seonjin Cha, Bloomberg (via Nevada ANP) December 26, 2011 * [npp-South Korea] New nuclear plants face public backlash, Shin Hyon-hee, Korea Herald (via Nevada ANP) * [uranium-South Korea] KEPCO picks Germany's RWE for new trading JV, Cho Mee-young, Reuters (via Nevada ANP) * [South Korea] South Korea - risk of power blackouts this winter, Kim Tae-gyu, The Korea Times front page story December 25, 2011 * [npp-South Korea] S. Korea plans to build more nuclear power plants: minister, Yonhap News Agency (also highlighted by Nevada ANP) * [npp-South Korea] Gov't power conservation rules reduce electricity use, Dong-A Ilbo * [npp-South Korea] Going nuclear with caution, The Korea Herald editorial (also highlighted by Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/China/South Korea] S. Korea, China to hold high-level talks on N. Korea, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea] Change in NK policy needed, Dong-A Ilbo (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea] South Korean funeral snub brings harsh words from the North, UPI December 24, 2011 * [npp-South Korea] Editorial: New nuclear plant site selection should be canceled, The Hankyoreh (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/China/South Korea] S. Korea, China to hold high-level talks on N. Korea, Yonhap News (via Nevada ANP) * [North Korea/South Korea] Seoul to hold additional nuclear talks, UPI (via Nevada ANP) October 25, 2006 *
Reactors may face suspension: nat'l assembly
Two South Korean nuclear reactors are on the brink of being suspended for 6 months and one year, respectively, after the process to extend their usage period ... *
Tiny sample of xenon confirms nuclear test
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Pyongyang threatens war if S.Korea joins sanctions
... The North issued a similar warning in September before it conducted a nuclear test earlier this month, prompting the UN Security Council to impose financial ... *
SKorea forms task force to carry out UN resolution on NKorea ...
... Oct. 9 nuclear test, both South Korea and China have been reluctant to impose stern measures against their volatile neighbor. The ... *
N. Korea warns South against sanctions
... saying Wednesday that its neighbor would 'pay a high price' if it joins the US-led drive to punish the reclusive communist nation for its nuclear test. ... *
North Korea warns South over sanctions
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Seoul rethinking unification strategy as Pyongyang continues to ...
... South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok handed in his resignation today to President Roh Moo-hyun after 'North Korea's recent nuclear test, [which ... *
N. Korea lets South search for Russian sailors in its waters
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Seoul Confirms North's Nuke Test
... Ministry said yesterday that a radioactive material has been detected in South Korea, officially confirming that the communist nation conducted a nuclear test. ... *
SKorea Officially Confirms North Nuke Test
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S. Korea reportedly has cruise missile
... and successfully. It has enough range to hit nuclear targets in North Korea or even Beijing or Tokyo, the report said. Defense Minister ... *
Pyongyang warning to South Korea
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SK preparing sanctions report for U.N.
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North warns against Seoul sanctions
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Seoul drafting measures against N.K.
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Silent Response to Nuclear Threat--People Have Stronger Fear Than Government
June 20, 2006 * [2006-03-25] U.S., S.Korea Begin Military Exercises * [2006-03-24] Emergency Response Problems Found in Three Nuclear Power Plants * [2006-03-07] KEPCO Strengthening Global Reach * 2005-05-17: KNEF promotes benefits of nuclear energy April 16, 2005 *
S. Korea Rejects Response With U.S. to N. Korea Collapse President Bush says he has no plans to invade North Korea but has made no secret of his loathing for Kim Jong Il and his preference for a change of regime. South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun is anxious to avoid a collapse that could send North Korean refugees streaming across the border. "The possibility of North Korea's collapse is very low," Roh said Wednesday during a visit to Germany, according to comments released by his office here. "And we don't have any intention to encourage it either." In January, Seoul rejected a contingency plan for the possible collapse of Kim Jong Il's regime. Code named Op-Plan 5029, the plan mapped out allied military responses in the event that Kim suddenly lost power and the Communist country started to come apart. South Korean officials apparently feared that the United States wanted to take command in case of a power vacuum and would send its troops hastily marching toward Pyongyang, perhaps under the flag of the same U.N. command that waged the 1950-1953 Korean War. South Korea, which considers all of the Korean peninsula to be rightfully its territory, wants to take the lead if North Korea collapses. "The plan could be a serious obstacle to exercising South Korea's sovereignty," South Korea's National Security Council said Friday in a terse statement confirming that the plan had been scrapped. * 2005-03-28: Editorial: Nuke dump site nearer? * 2005-03-24: Nuclear energy key to growth, stability * 2005-03-23: Nuclear-Powered US Submarine Enters Chinhae Port * 2005-03-22: Selection of Nuke Dump Site Due by September * 2005-03-18: Teamwork Getting Shaky in Nuclear Game ...[F]or South Koreans, [North Korea] is an object of engagement for peace and co-prosperity though it is as impenetrable as unpredictable. Hence inevitable it is for South Korea to try to get along with the "brethren" of North Korea as well as the "blood-tied" ally of the U.S., struggling to go between the trust-lacking enemies across the Pacific... Most Koreans heap scorn on the Japanese, who react to a dozen of their citizens so extravagantly, while turning a deaf ear to hundreds of thousands of Koreans that fell victim to the brutal Japanese colonialism last century, political observers said... Japan's recent provocation over the Tokto islets and a history textbook reminded the people of deeply harbored patriotism, thereby unifying not only the ideologically split people in the South but also the two Koreas, divided by heavily fortified border, the observers said. * 2005-03-14: Korea and the Two Alliances * 2005-03-14: Three Types of Radioactive Waste * 2005-03-11: S. Korea Plans to Extend Service Life of Aging Nuclear Reactors September 17, 2004 *
IAEA Inspection Team Arrives Sunday
The IAEA inspectors will focus on finding out details of the uranium conversion activities conducted in South Korea in the 1980s that produced 150 kilograms of uranium metal. They will also attempt to determine why only 134 kilograms of the metal remain, officials said. In addition, inspectors will try to gain a clear picture of where the 2.5 kilograms of irradiated depleted uranium came from and why the scientists involved in the 1980s experiments separated a small amount of plutonium from the irradiated material. South Korea recently admitted to the enrichment of uranium in 2000 through a laser separation method as well as the plutonium extraction in 1982 that may have violated international law. Even though the Seoul government has claimed that it didn't authorize the tests, some IAEA member countries are suspicious of its explanation that those scientists had conducted experiments out of "scholastic curiosity". *
IAEA starts ROK probe
The dispatch of another team in less than three weeks is evidence of how seriously the UN agency regards the recently disclosed plutonium extraction and uranium enrichment, no matter how small their amounts may have been. On Monday, Mohamed ElBaradei, IAEA director general, termed the failure to report them immediately as a "matter of serious concern". *
'IAEA will confirm Seoul's innocence'
Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon yesterday reiterated Seoul's innocence: "The experiments with nuclear substances has nothing to do with the enrichment or reprocessing necessary in producing nuclear weapons, and we firmly believe our government's determination to fully support non-proliferation will be proven to the world through results of the IAEA inspection," he said at his weekly news conference. "It is regrettable that some quarters of the international community, including the foreign media, did not base reports on facts and raised suspicions about the transparency of our peaceful nuclear activities", Ban said. *
Seoul Mulls Separate Dump For High-Exposed Nuclear Waste
The government plans to come up with a new plan for the construction of a nuclear waste storage facility by October after no local city or county applied to be a candidate site through Thursday. None dared to apply after witnessing five months of violence in Wido. "The current system stores high-and low-exposed nuclear waste materials alike, but we are looking at a fundamental change on the system," Jo Seok, chief of the nuclear reactor project department at the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Energy, said in a radio program. *
Ministry hard pressed to find nuke-waste dump
"For 18 years since 1986, one administration after another has been pushing the job to their successors. It's time for the government to step up and take responsibility to build this crucial dump site for spent nuclear fuel," said Kim Tae-woo, a senior research fellow at the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analysis. He also called on the government to be more generous with its incentives and reassure the country on the safety of the waste dump. "We need to have provinces and cities jumping for a chance to become home to a safe dump site," Kim said. August 6, 2003 * South Korea - Wido islet slated for LLRW/ILRW repository by 2008; spent fuel by 2016 August 1, 2003 * [Korea] Puan Residents Stage Naval Protests
July 24, 2003 * South Korea: West Sea islet confirmed as site for nuclear waste dump Since 1986, consecutive governments in South Korea have been unable to build a permanent waste dump due to extreme resistance from residents of candidate areas. The central government has promised enormous cash subsidies and redevelopment projects for Buan and Wido. Buan County's application triggered fierce protests from residents fearing environmental and health disasters. Buan residents have staged a series of violent street rallies, vowing to thwart any government attempt to build the nuclear waste dump in their backyard. * South Korea 1998
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