Crisis Management for a Conflict with North Korea

This is the best North Korea conflict crisis support available today. Predict, plan, build, prepare, train, and test in the right way.

Learn more about our NK Crisis Toolkit here

光電環評加嚴 經濟部:加強推動屋頂型並評估提修法

Stricter Photovoltaic Environmental Assessments Economic Ministry: Strengthening Promotion of Rooftop Systems and Considering Legal Amendments

Central News Agency | Local Language | News | Nov. 25, 2025 | Regulation

The Legislative Yuan has revised the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Act, adding clauses requiring environmental assessments for photovoltaic projects on ten types of sites, such as national scenic areas, important wetlands, and hillside land. However, rooftop and smaller-scale self-use solar systems are excluded from these stricter requirements. These amendments, proposed by the People’s Party caucus and passed on November 14, have been criticized by the Taiwan Photovoltaic Industry Association and other industry groups as significant obstacles to Taiwan’s energy transition.

The Ministry of Economic Affairs, led by Minister Kung Ming-hsin, expressed regret over the amendments, labeling the approved version as “excessively strict.” The ministry had preferred an alternative proposal from the Kuomintang but was ultimately overridden. The ministry has received considerable feedback from businesses impacted by the changes and is currently studying potential responses, including the possibility of proposing legislative amendments. Any such steps would involve coordination with the Ministry of Environment, which oversees the EIA Act.

Despite the new regulations, the Ministry of Economic Affairs plans to strengthen promotion of rooftop photovoltaic systems, which remain unaffected by the amendments. The ministry emphasizes that green power supply is critical for maintaining Taiwan’s international competitiveness, and stricter regulations limiting green energy development could negatively affect companies' carbon-reduction efforts, export competitiveness, industrial supply chains, and potentially lead to loss of orders and investment withdrawal.

New Developments

South Korea Firms | Nov. 25, 2025

South Korea Accelerates North American Manufacturing Shift Amid Semiconductor Investment Surge

Competitiveness | Nov. 25, 2025

Surge of New Entrants and Intensifying Rivalry in South Korea’s Expanding Electric Vehicle Market

Japan Geopolitics & Defense | Nov. 25, 2025

Johannesburg G20 Summit Adopts Landmark Declaration Amid US Boycott

Geopolitics & Defense | Nov. 25, 2025

No Japan-China Bilateral Talks Highlight Ongoing Diplomatic Tensions at G20 Summit

China Technology & Innovation | Nov. 25, 2025

China’s Humanoid Robotics Surge Drives Industrialization Amid Market Reshuffle

Technology & Innovation | Nov. 25, 2025

China Begins Two-Year Commercial Trial of Satellite IoT Services

Taiwan Technology & Innovation | Nov. 25, 2025

AI Server Advancements and Cloud Infrastructure Boom Reshape Technology Supply Chains

Firms | Nov. 25, 2025

Volatility in Taiwan’s Semiconductor Market Amid TSMC’s US Expansion and Shifting Investor Flows

India Environment | Nov. 25, 2025

Escalating Air Pollution in Delhi NCR Triggers Protests and Emergency Measures

Geopolitics & Defense | Nov. 25, 2025

India and South Africa Deepen Strategic Partnership at G20 Summit

Vietnam Financial System | Nov. 25, 2025

Record Bitcoin Price Declines and Market Liquidations Amid Shifting Investor Sentiment and Policy Signals

Environment | Nov. 25, 2025

Historic Flooding and Recovery Initiatives in Vietnam’s South Central and Central Highlands