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Samsung to Take Green Power Pledge in Shift to Renewable Energy

Samsung will make the renewable energy pledge as early as the May 10 inauguration of South Korea’s new president


Samsung Electronics is developing a generative AI model for use on its handsets.
Samsung Electronics is developing a generative AI model for use on its handsets (Reuters file photo).

 

Samsung Electronics will soon announce its renewable energy plans and green energy targets, joining a slew of global peers transitioning towards clean energy, a person familiar with the matter said.

The world’s biggest chipmaker is late to the renewable energy pledge. Its domestic competitor, SK Hynix, joined the RE100 initiative, which sets a 2050 target for 100% renewable electricity, two years ago.

Companies such as Apple, TSMC and Intel are already among the RE100 initiative’s 350 members that have marked out climate goals.

The timing of the announcement, expected as early as the May 10 inauguration of South Korea’s new president, will bring it on board just as the country’s energy policy is set to turn away from the prior administration’s aggressive push into renewables, and towards a pro-nuclear stance.

“It will be a group-wide announcement that also includes affiliates such as Samsung Display,” a person with direct knowledge of the matter said.

 

ALSO READ: Samsung lagging on renewable energy pledge, says Greenpeace

 

“The entire group will announce its climate goals as well as clean energy targets, including RE100, around when the new administration kicks off,” the source said, asking not to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue.

The source added that Samsung had discussed with President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol’s transition committee the regulations and hurdles that discourage the use of renewable energy.

Samsung declined to comment, while the CDP, an environmental non-profit organisation that brings together companies seeking to join RE100, said only that an announcement on clean energy and climate goals was expected this year.

“Samsung Electronics told us that it has notified its foreign investors that it would join and announce RE100 within this year,” Kim Tae-han, a senior researcher at the CDP Korean committee, said.

Yoon has also tapped Han Hwa-jin, a climate specialist and outside director at Samsung, to serve as his government’s environment minister.

The timing of Samsung’s RE100 announcement on its green energy plans could depend in part on the appointment of Han’s replacement on the board.

“Samsung needs the legitimacy of all outside directors being present and approving the announcement,” Lee Jong-oh, director at the Korea Sustainability Investing Forum, said.

 

The Risk Of Not Switching To Renewable Energy

Samsung has long acknowledged the risk of inaction on climate change, estimating based on 2020 revenue that up to 25.8 trillion won ($20.6 billion), or 20%, of its business-to-business sales such as chips could be lost if it does not switch to clean energy.

“Our customers are demanding to produce products using 100% renewable energy to achieve their goals. There is an evident risk that our sales may be affected if these demands are not met,” Samsung said in a statement posted on CDP’s website in 2021.

It’s not just B2B customers like Apple, which buys its chips, or consumers who buy its Galaxy smartphones who are concerned about Samsung’s action on climate and green energy.

BlackRock, the fourth-largest institutional investor in Samsung stock according to Eikon data, said in a voting bulletin at its annual shareholders’ meeting last month that investors had only limited access to information on Samsung’s green energy strategies. It also criticised the board for a lack of urgency on climate issues.

Samsung Electronics has already been running its chip factories in China and the United States 100% with renewable electricity since 2019, but they accounted for just 10.7% of its total global energy consumption in 2020.

 

The Need For An Aggressive Shift To Renewable Energy

Its chip factories in South Korea accounted for 63.5% of its total global electricity use in 2020, and most of its $51.6 billion in profit last year, but ran almost entirely on non-renewable power.

It is building its third chip factory in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, and three more are planned for the city. Once completed, they are projected to consume 21.6 TWh per year, exceeding the entire electricity consumption of Busan, South Korea’s second-largest city with 3.3 million people, according to an opposition lawmaker. Samsung did not dispute the figure.

This raises the stakes for Samsung Electronics’ profitability in South Korea’s energy policy.

While environmental groups have argued that an aggressive shift to renewables is necessary to promote economies of scale, Sonn Yang-hoon, an economics professor at Incheon National University, said Yoon’s more cautious, pro-nuclear approach would help to stabilise electricity prices and let Samsung sustain profitability while moving towards renewables.

“Nuclear power will buy time until renewable energy gets cheaper with technological breakthroughs,” Sonn said. “Samsung Electronics will bide its time until renewable energy prices drop before it carries out RE100 at full throttle.”

The Korea Energy Economics Institute estimates the price of green energy sources solar and wind will fall as much as 55% and 44%, respectively, by 2030 from 2020.

Yoon, who won the March 9 presidential election by the smallest margin in South Korea’s democratic history, aims for an energy mix of 20-25% renewables and 30-35% nuclear by 2030, compared with his predecessor’s target of 70% from renewables and only 6% from nuclear by 2050.

Nuclear power accounted for 29% and renewable energy 6.6% in 2020, Electric Power Statistics Information System data showed.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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