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Clean Energy Growth: South Korea's 2030 Renewables Plan Amid Global Investment Shifts
Published 3 weeks, 1 day ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows mixed signals of ambitious policy pushes and strategic consolidations amid regulatory caution. South Korea's government announced plans on April 6 to generate 20 percent of power from renewables by 2030, expanding capacity to 100 gigawatts from last year's 11.4 percent share, while phasing out 60 coal plants by 2040 but preserving 21 newer ones as security power beyond that date[1][5][9][11]. This balances import reduction and rising demand from advanced industries.
Key deals include FlexGen's April 2 acquisition of Clean Energy Services, bolstering battery storage software, services, and utility-scale solar reliability[2]. UAE is accelerating global clean energy investments via new projects, positioning itself as a hub[6]. Germany broke ground on the world's tallest 364-meter wind turbine in a former coal mine, optimizing high-altitude winds to replace multiple smaller units and cut land use[7].
Market movements spotlight Quanta Services, WEC Energy Group, and NOV as top renewable stocks on April 5, driven by high trading volume amid electrification and AI data center demands[4]. No major price shifts or supply chain disruptions emerged, but longer-term data projects India's clean energy jobs tripling to 905,000 by 2029-30 from 318,000 in 2021-22, with solar leading[3].
Leaders respond pragmatically: South Korea supports green tech like solar modules and batteries, plus steel's hydrogen iron-making by 2037[1]. China retrains coal miners for renewables[12]. Compared to prior reports, this builds on steady job growth noted globally at 16.6 million in 2024, but contrasts U.S. cuts of over 13 billion dollars in clean projects since May 2025, hitting hydrogen hubs[8].
Consumer behavior holds steady toward EVs, targeting 40 percent of South Korea's new car sales by 2030[1]. Overall, policy ambition drives growth despite fossil fuel backups. (298 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Key deals include FlexGen's April 2 acquisition of Clean Energy Services, bolstering battery storage software, services, and utility-scale solar reliability[2]. UAE is accelerating global clean energy investments via new projects, positioning itself as a hub[6]. Germany broke ground on the world's tallest 364-meter wind turbine in a former coal mine, optimizing high-altitude winds to replace multiple smaller units and cut land use[7].
Market movements spotlight Quanta Services, WEC Energy Group, and NOV as top renewable stocks on April 5, driven by high trading volume amid electrification and AI data center demands[4]. No major price shifts or supply chain disruptions emerged, but longer-term data projects India's clean energy jobs tripling to 905,000 by 2029-30 from 318,000 in 2021-22, with solar leading[3].
Leaders respond pragmatically: South Korea supports green tech like solar modules and batteries, plus steel's hydrogen iron-making by 2037[1]. China retrains coal miners for renewables[12]. Compared to prior reports, this builds on steady job growth noted globally at 16.6 million in 2024, but contrasts U.S. cuts of over 13 billion dollars in clean projects since May 2025, hitting hydrogen hubs[8].
Consumer behavior holds steady toward EVs, targeting 40 percent of South Korea's new car sales by 2030[1]. Overall, policy ambition drives growth despite fossil fuel backups. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI