Korea Electric Power Corp. is facing an “unprecedented financial crisis” and a normalization of power prices is “urgently needed,” according to the utility’s new chief executive.
“Debt issuance has reached its limits,” Kim Dong-cheol said in a speech at his inauguration on Wednesday. “The more debt Kepco incurs, the more its creditworthiness will be downgraded and the higher the borrowing rates will be, accelerating the pace of its collapse,” he said, according to a transcript.
State-owned Kepco, which supplies about 70% of South Korea’s electricity, still relies heavily on imported fossil fuels and struggled with rising costs for coal and liquefied natural gas following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Seoul, meanwhile, has been reluctant to raise electricity prices too much as it tries to avoid spurring inflation.
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The utility’s debt is 201 trillion won ($151 billion), which is around 30% of the South Korean government’s annual budget, said Kim, a 68-year-old former lawmaker. “Even if Kepco spent its entire annual revenue in three years, it would not be able to repay it.”
Kim said Kepco must transform itself to rely less on domestic electricity sales over the medium- to long-term, and that the company should expand more into renewable energy.
It’s likely that the government will “prop Kepco up,” but that will expose Seoul to financial risk if it allows it to get into more debt while not decarbonizing the grid, Christina Ng, debt markets research and stakeholder engagement leader at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. Kepco risks going into a “death spiral,” she said in comments made before Kim’s speech.