South Korea’s transition bottlenecks keep LNG in play
The country’s new government has grand plans for renewables, but the structural changes needed for these policies will take years to carry out
Newly elected South Korean President Lee Jae-myung has promised to cut the country’s reliance on LNG while phasing out coal and rapidly scaling renewable power. However, the country’s power system was not designed to adapt quickly, and the structural changes needed to support this vision are likely years away from materialising. Electricity demand is forecast to climb steadily amid continued investment in the semiconductor, AI and datacentre sectors. With nuclear output already near its limits, renewables constrained by transmission bottlenecks and regulatory misalignment, and a lack of cross-border interconnectors, South Korea’s dependence on LNG is likely to expand in the coming years. Lee
Also in this section
7 January 2026
No longer can the energy source be considered a sidekick to oil in the Middle East and neither should it step aside for less convincing alternatives
7 January 2026
The global race for critical minerals has become a defining feature of energy geopolitics, presenting the ASEAN region with both opportunity and risk
7 January 2026
As global energy systems evolve to meet shifting demand and transition pressures, maintaining reliable hydrocarbon supply remains essential to energy security
6 January 2026
Cash will be needed to boost production by 30% to meet region’s rapidly rising power demand, executives told the inaugural Middle East Gas Conference in December






