In this list
LNG | Natural Gas

Analysis: South Korea slashes LNG taxes for power producers by 75%, boosting LNG potential

Energy Transition | Natural Gas

Methane Performance Certificate Assessments

Energy

Emerging markets: Comparing China and India’s energy-demand profiles

Capital Markets | Commodities | Energy | Natural Gas | Natural Gas (European) | Natural Gas (North American) | Natural Gas Risk | Shipping | Leveraged Finance & High Yield | Materials | Building & Construction | Financial Services | Banking | Infrastructure | Structured Finance

LNG Conference, 20th

Crude Oil | Upstream

Asian refiners assess logistics costs on edgy geopolitics, fret less over supply risks

Energy | LNG

Platts JKM™ (Japan Korea Marker) LNG Price Assessment

Electric Power | Energy Transition | Emissions | Hydrogen | Renewables

Moment of truth looms for European green hydrogen investments

For full access to real-time updates, breaking news, analysis, pricing and data visualization subscribe today.

Subscribe Now

Analysis: South Korea slashes LNG taxes for power producers by 75%, boosting LNG potential

Highlights

LNG taxes down to Won 23/kg vs Won 46/kg for thermal coal

Tax benefits effective from April, not applicable to city gas sector

Government eyes coal power production caps in shoulder season

  • Author
  • Charles Lee    Abache Abreu
  • Editor
  • Jonathan Fox
  • Commodity
  • LNG Natural Gas
  • Topic
  • LNG Commoditization

Seoul — The South Korean government Tuesday gave its final approval to lower taxes on LNG used for power production by 75%, and raise those on thermal coal by 28% from April 1, in a move likely to boost downstream gas consumption.

Not registered?

Receive daily email alerts, subscriber notes & personalize your experience.

Register Now

The decision is likely to boost LNG demand from the world's third-largest LNG importer. South Korea imported 42.7 million mt of LNG in 2018, up 15% from a year earlier, according to S&P Global Platts Analytics.

The decision is driven by the government's efforts to reduce the country's heavy reliance on coal and increase the use of natural gas and renewables amid growing air pollution concerns.

South Korea's energy tax regime has traditionally triggered criticism that it does not do enough to cut coal demand and increase competitiveness of LNG prices.

"Currently, total taxes on LNG are Won 91.4/kg, much higher than taxes on coal at Won 36/kg, said an official with the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy. "But through the tax rate changes from next month, total taxes on LNG will be lowered to Won 23/kg, compared with Won 46/kg on coal."

The tax benefit, however, is applicable to LNG used in electricity generation, not city gas households and businesses, the official said.

RISING LNG COMPETITIVENESS

Taxes on LNG for power production, which comprise consumption tax, import surcharge and import tariff, will be lowered to Won 23/kg ($0.02/kg) from Won 91.4/kg currently.

Consumption tax will be reduced to Won 12/kg from Won 60/kg, import surcharge will be lowered to Won 3.8/kg from Won 24.2/kg, and imports tariffs will remain unchanged at Won 7.2/kg.

Import surcharge and tariffs are used to fund the country's energy projects, according to the ministry official.

Consumption tax on thermal coal will increase to Won 46/kg from Won 36/kg currently, after rising from Won 30/kg in April 2018. There are no import surcharge or import tariffs on coal.

"The tax measure would reduce the country's fine dust production by 427 mt/year," the official said.

FURTHER COAL PRODUCTION CUTS

In an additional measure to reduce coal consumption, the country has closed four coal-fired power plants aged over 30 years from March through June 2018.

The government is also pushing to reduce operations at the other coal-fired power plants during the off-peak spring seasons, the official said.

President Moon Jae-in is pushing to reduce the portion of coal in the country's actual power production to 36.1% in 2030 from 43.1% in 2017, while boosting LNG to 18.8% in 2030 from 16.9% in 2017.

He also aims to increase the share of renewables to 20% in 2030 from 6.7% in 2017, while reduce the share of nuclear to 23.9% in 2030 from 30.3% in 2017.

President Moon, who took office in May 2017, has pledged to shut down 10 aged coal-fired power plants before his five-year term ends in May 2022.

Among them, four coal-fired power plants have been already closed, and two more will be permanently shut down by December this year or early next year. The government has also pushed for converting some coal-fired power plants under construction into LNG-based ones, which would help boost the country's LNG demand.

-- Charles Lee, newsdesk@spglobal.com

-- Abache Abreu, abache.abreu@spglobal.com

-- Edited by Jonathan Fox, newsdesk@spglobal.com

Building bridges: Energy and commodities in the construction sector

S&P Global Platts explores some of the factors driving construction markets and how developments in commodities such as oil, gas and steel play a key role in determining whether projects get built, and how much they may cost to develop.

Download the report