South Korea

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

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


News
Media
301

Government
Releases
31

City/State
Releases
28

Embassy
Releases
0
Foreign
Service
Advisories
0
Academic/
Think
Tank
1


Podcasts
0


Videos
0

Social
Media
0

Business
Releases
2

Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.

The goal is to provide intelligence that allows decision makers to avoid being blindsided by what they may have missed, while informing them to make better decisions as well.

Risk Categories Reported on Today

Risk Category
Items Reported On
Regulation
21
Accidents
7
Extreme Weather Events
1
Political Scandal or Corruption
14
Shifting Geopolitical Alliances
1
Epidemics and Pandemics
1
IP Protection
3
Geopolitical Conflict and Disputes
6
North Korea
4
Crime
2
Supply Chain Issues
1
Privacy
1
Protest, Demonstration, Dissent
1
Corporate Corruption or Fraud
1
Pollution
1

Erudite Risk also includes operations categories so you can monitor the environment for better decision making. Everything is tied together--what happens in risk affects operations and what happens in the market impacts risk profiles.

We categorize key intelligence into one of 30 different operations intelligence categories.

Different roles and functions within the organization can monitor different key issue areas. HR may monitor employment, wages, regulations, labor and management relations, etc., while P&L leaders may monitor overall developing trends.

Operations Categories Reported on Today

Operations Category
Items Reported On
Investor Sentiment
2
Initiative
1
Taxes
1
Bizdev-Partnering
9
Tech Development/Adoption
28
Asset Price Change
14
Financial System Problems
2
Mergers & Acquisitions
5
Real Estate
4
Economic Growth
6
Demographics
3
Trade Issues and Numbers
1
Employment
1
Operating Results
3
Legal Exposure
3
Inflation
1

핀테크 폭풍성장 美·英처럼 … 한국도 규제 확 풀어야 혁신금융 '닻' 올린다

Fintech Booming Like in the US and UK … South Korea Must Greatly Ease Regulations to Launch Innovative Finance

Maekyung | Local Language | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | Regulation

South Korea's finance and insurance sectors currently contribute about 5% to GDP, significantly lower than the 8–25% seen in major financial hubs like the US, UK, Singapore, and Hong Kong. While Korea's economy ranks in the world’s top 10, the country's financial industry lacks comparable structural depth and dynamism, partly due to a historically risk-averse regulatory environment shaped by past crises, such as the foreign exchange crisis and the pandemic-induced shocks affecting global banks in 2023.

International examples reveal that financial innovation thrives in regulatory environments that balance risk management with flexibility. The UK’s fintech sandbox, launched in 2015, enabled startups like Revolut and Monzo to rapidly grow by experimenting within a controlled framework, leading to over 18 fintech unicorns valued at $1 billion or more. The US adopted a "negative regulatory principle," allowing most innovations unless explicitly prohibited, which fostered companies like Plaid and Chime to pioneer open banking and inclusive finance models. Brazil’s reform of open finance policies reduced entry barriers, enabling Nubank to emerge as a mobile superbank improving financial accessibility for low-income populations.

The common factor in these successful ecosystems is regulatory flexibility—where rules allow innovation through managed risk-taking, and accountability comes only when systemic harm arises. Such frameworks support ongoing experimentation, aligning with Nobel laureate Paul Romer’s view that growth results from institutional environments open to new ideas. Korea’s financial sector has shown early signs of adopting this mindset, exemplified by the 2019 financial regulatory sandbox that allowed Toss Bank to innovate in lending by partnering with regional banks to offer better loan terms.

With Korea’s advanced digital infrastructure, skilled workforce, and digitally receptive customers, the country stands poised to shift from a culture focused on risk avoidance to one that embraces "responsible challenge." Sustainable financial innovation will require a regulatory approach that tolerates trial and error while effectively managing risk, rather than seeking to eliminate all uncertainties. As technological advances like AI and blockchain reshape finance, Korea’s financial industry must evolve its regulatory framework to foster innovation and maintain competitiveness amid changing market dynamics.

AI 시대 통신생태계 안정 발전 위해 “망 이용대가 공정화 입법 서둘러야”

In the AI era, legislation to ensure fair network usage fees must be expedited for the stable development of the telecommunications ecosystem

ET News | Local Language | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | Regulation

The telecommunications industry is urging expedited legislation on network usage fees to ensure fair and stable development of the AI ecosystem amid ongoing Korea-U.S. tariff negotiations. The recently finalized fact sheet from these negotiations emphasizes non-discrimination toward American companies in digital services laws and policies, raising concerns about potential impacts on network usage fee policies.

Currently, most major operators in Korea, including domestic firms like Naver and Kakao and foreign companies such as Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, and Apple, pay network usage fees either directly or indirectly. Google is the exception, not currently paying such fees. The non-discrimination principle suggests system reforms are necessary so that all companies, including Google, contribute fairly to telecom carriers.

With AI technologies such as ChatGPT increasing demand for high-capacity data traffic, fair network usage fees are critical to finance infrastructure investments. Google alone accounted for 31.2% of Korea’s total data traffic last year and would be liable for annual traffic costs estimated around 200 billion won. If telecom carriers do not receive adequate fees from content providers, infrastructure costs may be passed on to consumers, risking network quality and national AI competitiveness.

Globally, countries like the EU and Australia are implementing legislation to share network investment responsibilities to support AI development. In Korea, four network usage fee-related bills aimed at prohibiting unjust or discriminatory network contracts are pending in the National Assembly. These bills seek to ensure fair regulatory practices between domestic and foreign companies in accordance with the principle of non-discrimination highlighted in the Korea-U.S. agreement.

Telecommunications industry representatives emphasize that existing laws already regulate foreign companies without discrimination and interpret the Korea-U.S. fact sheet as promoting regulatory transparency and equitable industrial cooperation rather than undermining fair fee structures.

Trade minister meets European business leaders to promote investment in S. Korea

Yonhap | English | News | Nov. 28, 2025 | UndeterminedBizdev-Partnering

Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo met with European business leaders in South Korea on November 27, 2025, to discuss measures for creating a stable investment environment. Attendees included representatives from Mercedes-Benz, Merck Korea, L'Oreal Korea, and the European Chamber of Commerce in Korea.

European companies raised concerns related to regulatory improvements, customs procedure simplifications, and the recognition of European standards as essential for boosting their investments. Yeo emphasized the South Korean government's commitment to reviewing relevant systems and regulations through the implementation of the Korea-EU free trade agreement to enhance market access for EU companies.

Try the Daily Briefing for your country of choice for two weeks--free of charge and with no obligation.

Have a service or subscription question? We'd be happy to hear from you.

How can we help?
Full Name:
Email Address:
Type of Inquiry:
Country of Interest:

Contact us for a free trial of the Daily Briefing for your country of choice.


We currently cover:
South Korea
Japan
China
Taiwan
Vietnam
India

info@eruditerisk.com

The Daily Briefing is delivered Monday through Thursday via email.

Each day's reports include a combination of:

Takes
Takes are our deep dives into a topic of enduring interest or concern. Takes include copious references to all the media resources we gathered to build them.

Developments
Developments are key issues and incidents being heavily reported on in country. These are the centers of local thought gravity around which everything else revolves.

Risk Media
Summaries and analysis of the most important risk issues reported on in media, arranged by risk category. Learn about risk trends and issues while they are developing--before they blow up.

Ops Media
Summaries and analysis of the most important operational issues reported on in media, arranged by operations category. See what's changing in your market, and what's not.

Government Releases
Government press and data releases on key economic data, regulation, law, intiatives, incidents. Straight from the government's press to your eyes in less than a day.

Embassy and Business Association Releases
Statements and news releases from foreign embassies and business/industry associations, including chambers of commerce.

The Daily Briefing is comprehensive!

The Daily Briefing can run 50-100 pages each day!

Luckily, Erudite Risk tailors every report specifically to you.

Content Filtering
We try hard to ensure that every piece of information included in each day's reports will be of interest to our readers.

To fulfill our goal of comprehensively monitoring the intelligence landscape and also keeping reports readable, we build big reports--then deliver only the information that applies to you.

Each Daily Briefing is a bespoke report matched to your concerns. Tell us what you want in it, or we can match it to your professional needs. It's that easy.