Outdated coal-fired plants, aged 30 years or over, will be temporarily closed down as part of the government’s emergency measure to combat fine dust, Cheong Wa Dae said Monday.
Under the plans, 10 out of 59 coal-fired plants, located in the Gangwon, South Jeolla, South Chungcheong and South Gyeongsang provinces, will stop operating for a month in June.
The concerned power plants have been in operation for 32 to 44 years.
The government also plans to shut down the 10 plants for four months next year, from March to June, when power demand is relatively low and fine dust level is high.
“President (Moon Jae-in)’s decision to halt operating aged coal-fired plants shows his strong will to provide a fundamental solution to the current fine dust problem,” said Yoon Young-chan, the chief press secretary.
Yoon also said Moon has ordered the senior social affairs secretary to create a special task force to deal with measures to combat fine dust here.
“The government will also install dust-measuring devices at some 11,000 elementary to high schools across the nation to constantly monitor air quality,” said President Moon Jae-in during his visit to an elementary school in Seoul on Monday.
Moon added that he would inject some 60 billion won (S$75 million) to complete installing those devices as well as air circulators.
During the presidential campaign, Moon has vowed to cut fine dust emissions by 30 per cent by reducing the number of coal-fired power plants.
His energy policy pledges included permanently closing old coal-fired plants within his five-year term while reassessing plans to construct nine new plants.
He also pledged to close old nuclear power plants and suspend the construction of new ones in an aim to become a nation without nuclear power in 40 years.
“We can no longer delay the pursuit of safe and clean energies. I will reduce coal-fired power plants and nuclear reactors, but increase renewable natural gas power generation,” Moon said in a statement.
“If construction on a coal-fired power plant is less than 10 per cent completed, I will review the project after taking leadership of the country.”
South Korea has 59 coal-fired power plants that currently produce about 40 per cent of the country’s electricity.
Nuclear power is the second-biggest source of electricity accounting for about 30 per cent of the output, followed by liquefied natural gas at 25 per cent and oil at 3 per cent.
Renewable sources account for just around 2 per cent of the nation’s electricity production.
According to government data, the 10 old coal-fired plants account for almost 20 per cent of the pollution — 33,000 tons of dust, sulfur oxide and nitrogen oxide — discharged from the total number of coal-fired plants operated in the country.