South Korea

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South Korea’s Fourth Nuri Rocket Launch Marks Shift Toward Commercial Space Operations
Nov. 28, 2025 | Technology & Innovation

South Korea conducted the fourth launch of its domestically developed Nuri rocket, advancing its launch technology, industrial partnerships, and infrastructure capacity.

**The Nuri (KSLV-II) lifted off from the Naro Space Center in Goheung at 1:13 a.m. on November 27, 2025, after teams addressed an abnormal signal from an umbilical retrieval pressure sensor, which had delayed the countdown by 18 minutes.**
This first nighttime launch and fourth overall mission lasted 18 minutes and 25 seconds. The first stage separated at about two minutes, the second stage at four minutes and 30 seconds, and the vehicle achieved a sun-synchronous orbit at roughly 600 km before deploying its payload.

**Standing 47.2 meters tall and weighing 200 tons at liftoff, the rocket carried nearly 960 kg of payload.**
The primary payload, Next-Generation Medium-Sized Satellite No 3 (CAS500-3), weighed approximately 500 kg and carries ROKITS instruments for aurora and airglow observation, IAMMAP sensors for ionospheric plasma and magnetic field measurement, and a Bio Cabinet for microgravity cell-printing experiments. Twelve CubeSats developed by universities, research institutes, and startups will conduct missions spanning space debris disposal, 6G communication tests, bio-production, Earth observation, and semiconductor component verification.

**Under a technology transfer agreement with the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI), Hanwha Aerospace served as system integrator for the first time, overseeing end-to-end vehicle production, assembly, and supply-chain management.**
Hanwha has produced 46 liquid engines to date—four 75-ton engines for the first stage, one 75-ton engine for the second stage, and a 7-ton engine for the third—slashing production time from six months to three through proprietary manufacturing adjustments. The company will also conduct launch operations for the fifth and sixth Nuri missions, slated for 2026 and 2027.

**Ground stations tracked engine burns, fairing separation, and payload deployment via telemetry.**
CAS500-3 made its first contact with the King Sejong Antarctic Station shortly after separation, and the CubeSats established sequential links with stations in Daejeon, Palau, Norway, and Antarctica. The Space and Aviation Agency and KARI will analyze mission data to verify precise orbit insertion and satellite performance against established success criteria.

**Naro Space Center’s No 2 launch pad system, designed, manufactured, and managed by HD Hyundai Heavy Industries, provided all mechanical and propellant ground support equipment and launch control facilities.**
The pad covers 6,000 m2 across three basement levels, has supported all four Nuri missions, and represents South Korea’s fully domestic launch infrastructure.

**This fourth mission reflects South Korea’s shift from a government-led space program toward a private sector–driven model.**
The upcoming fifth and sixth launches will validate repeatable production and scalable operations, after which Hanwha Aerospace will assume full commercial launch responsibility. From the seventh mission in 2028 onward, Nuri is expected to fly at least once a year and introduce payload fee structures for private sector customers beyond the sixth state-focused flights.

**Amid global launch capacity constraints caused by delays and restrictions at Japanese, European, and Russian providers, South Korea aims to position Nuri as a competitive medium-class launch vehicle.**
With over 300 domestic suppliers, a complete in-country launch infrastructure, and a roadmap to commercial operations, the program seeks to secure a foothold in the expanding global satellite launch market.
Omnimodal AI Agent Race Accelerates as Naver and Kakao Advance Multimodal Platforms
Nov. 27, 2025 | Technology & Innovation

Recent advancements in AI agent platforms focus on integrating text, images, voice, intonation, and emotional cues into a single model to enable more natural, contextually aware interactions.

**Naver and Kakao are each building “omnimodal” AI models that learn from multiple data types within one architecture.**
These models will serve as the backbone of their next-generation AI agent services, scheduled to launch next year, and allow users to engage across modalities without switching among siloed systems.

**Kakao’s current multimodal engine, KANANA-o, merges vision and audio processing and already operates within KakaoTalk to analyze short-form content.**
It detects user emotions and intonation to support more natural conversational exchanges. Kakao applies reinforcement learning continuously to sharpen KANANA-o’s communication skills and optimizes the model for deployment across its broader service portfolio.

**The company plans to evolve KANANA-o into a full omnimodal platform by 2026.**
Meanwhile, it will introduce a successor—KANANA2—later this year. KANANA2 will feature advanced architectures such as Mixture of Experts and Multi-Head Latent Attention, and Kakao is considering an open-source release to encourage community-driven enhancements and wider adoption.

**Naver is advancing toward omnimodality with its forthcoming HyperCLOVA X foundation model, expected in January 2026, alongside the integrated Agent N platform, which will unify text, image, and voice inputs under one interface.**
In July, Naver set a precedent by open-sourcing the HyperCLOVA X Seed 14B Think model, signaling its strategy of sharing foundational technology with the broader ecosystem.

**By embedding vision, audio, text, and affective cues in a single framework, both companies aim to deliver AI agents that adapt seamlessly to human communication nuances and enhance user experience across diverse input forms.**

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Nov. 28, 2025


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North may possess more than 400 nuclear weapons by 2040: Analyst

Joongang Ilbo | English | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | North Korea

North Korea currently possesses an estimated 150 nuclear weapons, including between 115 and 131 uranium-based weapons and 15 to 19 plutonium bombs. This figure is significantly higher than international estimates of around 50 weapons. An analyst from the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses (KIDA), Lee Sang-kyu, projects that North Korea’s nuclear arsenal could expand to about 243 weapons by 2030 and may exceed 400 by 2040 as the country strengthens its nuclear material production capabilities.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has emphasized an exponential increase in the nuclear arsenal since a 2022 party meeting, reaffirming the policy in 2024 as part of efforts to deter threats. North Korea is also developing advanced weapons systems including nuclear-powered submarines. The country is constructing a 5,000 to 6,000-ton nuclear submarine and aims to develop a small reactor to power it, though this could take over a decade. There is speculation that Russia might provide technological assistance or key materials for the submarine project.

Kim Jong-un’s visit to a shipyard in March 2025 marked North Korea’s first official public confirmation of building a nuclear-powered submarine, signaling an expansion of its maritime defense capabilities. These efforts are part of broader strategic advancements alongside other sophisticated weapons such as spy satellites and solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Gov't plans to establish test cities, revise laws and more to bolster self-driving vehicle industry

Joongang Ilbo | English | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | Regulation

South Korea plans to establish large-scale autonomous driving test-bed cities to advance its autonomous vehicle technology from Level 3 (conditional automation) to Level 4 (high automation). The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport announced a government initiative to create a citywide autonomous driving test zone by 2026, deploying around 100 autonomous vehicles in the area. Currently, autonomous vehicles operate only in limited pilot zones across 47 areas rather than full urban environments.

The government aims to overhaul existing regulations including allowing the use of raw video footage for R&D, which is expected to improve recognition accuracy by up to 25 percent. Presently, laws require video footage to be pseudonymized, hindering data utility. Additionally, a new legal role called the autonomous vehicle safety manager will be introduced to clearly define criminal and administrative liabilities for Level 4 driverless vehicles, covering incidents such as signal breaches and hit-and-runs.

South Korea faces strong competition from the United States and China, where more extensive real-world testing and capital investments have accelerated industry advancement. In the global autonomous driving sector, 14 of the top 20 companies are based in the US, four in China, and only one each in Britain and Korea. To address potential conflicts with existing taxi operators, a tripartite consultation body will be formed involving the government, autonomous driving firms, and taxi representatives. The government aims to commercialize Level 4 autonomous vehicles by 2027.

中 차량 '도청·정보 유출' 우려…세계 각국 대응 나섰다

Concerns over eavesdropping and information leaks in Chinese vehicles prompt responses from countries worldwide

ZD Net Korea | Local Language | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | Privacy

Israel, the UK, and other countries have classified Chinese-made vehicles as potential eavesdropping devices, prompting countermeasures against wireless backdoor attacks. Israel has notably recalled approximately 700 Chinese electric vehicles leased to senior military officials due to concerns over wireless backdoor vulnerabilities, even after initially disabling cameras and microphones in these vehicles. This recall effectively labels Chinese-made electric vehicles as a national security threat.

Electric and software-defined vehicles (SDVs) integrate extensive data and systems, making them vulnerable to data leaks through in-vehicle communication modules and wireless backdoors. Israel specifically highlighted the risk of sensitive information exposure, including military patterns, through vehicle location data and passenger conversations. BYD is set to release three electric passenger car models domestically this year, which raises further security scrutiny.

The UK Ministry of Defence has advised against connecting Ministry devices to Chinese electric vehicles and uses warning stickers to prohibit confidential conversations inside such vehicles. The United States has pursued regulations under both the Biden and Trump administrations aimed at banning or tightening security on connected vehicles containing Chinese-made software and hardware. There is a growing indication that multiple countries need to develop measures to prevent vehicle eavesdropping and information leaks.

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