South Korea

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

South Korea Advances National AI Strategy Amid Industry Push and Civil Society Concerns
Jan. 2, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

South Korea’s national AI initiatives are reshaping industry standards, regulatory approaches and public engagement.

**People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) criticized South Korea’s draft National AI Action Plan for prioritizing AI industry promotion over fundamental rights like human dignity and self-determination of personal information.**
PSPD noted that the plan exempts public consent requirements and relaxes regulations for industrial convenience, echoing past policies that elevated economic growth above citizens’ rights. It identified six high-risk areas—information rights, health care and welfare, economy, defense, climate and society—and warned that equating state and corporate interests with individual rights undermines constitutionally guaranteed protections. PSPD also highlighted the plan’s insufficient 20-day public consultation period and called for extended, meaningful engagement with civil society and directly affected individuals.

**The AI Framework Act, set to take effect in January 2026, mirrors this industry-first approach by favoring minimal, flexible regulation to spur AI innovation without banning unethical practices or addressing domains where AI could threaten human safety and rights.**
Subordinate statutes under the act continue to prioritize industrial development over robust safeguards and disregard repeated civil society appeals for stronger protections. Analysts argue that without substantial amendments to both the Framework Act and the National AI Action Plan, South Korea risks perpetuating a regulatory environment that fails to constrain corporate AI deployments and leaves individuals vulnerable to algorithmic harms.

**In his 2026 New Year’s address, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Science and ICT Bae Kyung-hoon cast AI as the linchpin of national competitiveness.**
He outlined plans to build an “AI basic society” benefitting all citizens, secure an independent world-class AI model and accelerate AI transformation across sectors including manufacturing, shipbuilding and logistics. Bae emphasized integrating semiconductors and AI into a “full-stack K-AI” ecosystem for global market entry and pledged an institutional framework to prioritize corporate security and wage an “all-out war against hacking.”

**Ministers collectively declared 2026 a pivotal year for innovation, naming AI among five priority sectors alongside bio, cultural content, defense and energy.**
Prime Minister Kim Min-seok stressed industrial structure innovation and fair benefit distribution, while Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance Koo Yoon-chul framed AI transformation as key to securing physical AI leadership and regional hub status. Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Kim Jeong-gwan aimed to link regional development with AI-enhanced trade through a manufacturing AI (M.AX) strategy, and Climate, Energy and Environment Minister Kim Seong-hwan outlined regulatory reforms to support a renewable-nuclear energy mix. Financial Services Commission Chairman Lee Eok-won introduced a finance strategy to underpin AI-driven economic growth via inclusive, innovation-focused financial support.

**On the industry front, major technology firms are scaling up infrastructure and services to align with these ambitions.**
Naver has begun phase 2 construction at its Gak Sejong data center—phase 3 is slated for completion by 2029—and plans to launch AI agent services such as a shopping assistant and conversational search (AI Tab) next year before integrating them into an all-in-one agent, Agent N, by 2027. Kakao is acquiring 2,424 NVIDIA B200 accelerators for its Ansan data center, dedicating 16% of government-allocated GPUs to generative AI model training, and advancing its open-source Kanana2 language model toward a mixture-of-experts architecture. Kakao Tools, the company’s AI agent linked to ChatGPT, will integrate with platforms including maps, gifting, music streaming, finance and mobility, and it plans a second Namyangju data center by 2029.

**At CES 2026, LG Electronics showcased the humanoid home robot “LG Cloyd,” featuring advanced five-finger dexterity for household tasks, and reorganized its robotics efforts under the Home Appliance Business Division to accelerate commercialization.**
Samsung Electronics emphasized a hyper-connected AI ecosystem via its SmartThings platform, demonstrating seamless integration across appliances such as the Gemini AI-powered Bespoke refrigerator without deploying standalone robotic hubs. This divergence reflects a broader market shift toward comprehensive ecosystems and data-centric optimization in the AI home sector.

**SK Group chairman Choi Tae-won told employees that the company’s previous investments in memory, ICT, energy solutions and batteries have set the stage for the emerging AI era.**
SK plans to reinforce its AI semiconductor capabilities and deliver “AI integrated solutions” by harnessing competencies across its energy, telecommunications, construction and bio affiliates. Choi described AI-driven innovation as the foundation for future growth and pledged support for creative challenges and development throughout 2026.

**HD Hyundai Heavy Industries launched its Future of Shipyard (FOS) initiative to digitize and AI-enable shipbuilding in three stages.**
The first “visible shipyard” phase now offers real-time process and equipment monitoring; the second stage links process data with AI for predictive decision-making; and the third phase, targeting 2030, aims to establish an autonomous shipyard with a 30% productivity increase and a 30% reduction in construction time. AI applications already optimize steel plate cutting, automate design calculations and speed owner requirement processing, while pilots of “physical AI” robotics for welding and assembly and digital twin simulations are underway. Simultaneously, HD Hyundai pursues a diversified decarbonization strategy with ammonia- and methanol-powered vessels, electric propulsion demonstrations and preparatory work on hydrogen solutions and small modular reactors.

**A Zoom-commissioned report found that 92% of South Korean AI-native companies regard AI as a critical competitive advantage, the highest rate in the Asia-Pacific.**
These firms anticipate that federated AI architectures combining multiple models will drive greater accuracy and cost efficiency in 2026. They expect agentic AI to automate routine tasks, shifting workforce focus toward creative strategy and human interaction. In marketing, widespread AI-generated content will heighten the importance of brand authenticity, ethical decision-making and balancing privacy with personalization. The report also predicts a shift from AI adoption to the establishment of effective AI governance frameworks under the upcoming AI Basic Law, effective January 2026, which aims to codify transparent, responsible AI system management.
Samsung DRAM Technology Leak Triggers Legal Action and Exposes Global Industry Risks
Jan. 2, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

Unauthorized transfer of DRAM process technology has prompted legal action and exposed critical vulnerabilities in the global semiconductor industry.

**The Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office indicted 10 individuals—five former Samsung Electronics employees and five associates of ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT)—for violating trade secret and unfair competition laws.**
Investigators allege that beginning in September 2016, a former Samsung department head and other ex-employees obtained Samsung’s classified 18-nanometer DRAM process technology through a contact now at CXMT. They copied hundreds of process steps by hand, established shell companies, relocated offices frequently and used coded language to evade detection.

**From 2018 to early 2023, CXMT’s second development team, led by another former Samsung executive, refined the stolen DRAM process to suit Chinese manufacturing conditions.**
In 2020, CXMT technicians also acquired DRAM process technology from SK hynix via subcontractor channels. Leveraging these illicit acquisitions, CXMT became the first Chinese—and fourth global—company to mass-produce 10-nanometer-class DRAM in 2023. Samsung Electronics attributes a revenue decline of about 5 trillion won in 2024 directly to this technology leak.

**Semiconductors account for 20.8 percent of South Korea’s exports, and prosecutors estimate the national economic damage at tens of trillions of won.**
They opened the investigation in January 2024 after related probes uncovered multiple technology leaks through both domestic and overseas channels, confirming threats to the nation’s semiconductor sector and technological security.

**Founded in 2016 with support from government entities and design firms, CXMT recruited its initial development team—including the former Samsung department head now indicted—and received proprietary DRAM process steps through this network.**
The current legal actions aim to address the breach of state-designated core technology and prevent further unauthorized dissemination of critical semiconductor know-how.

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Jan. 2, 2026


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Electric Vehicle National Subsidy Maximum Increased from 5.8 Million to 6.8 Million Won…Conditioned on Replacing Internal Combustion Engine Vehicles

ZD Net Korea | Local Language | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | Regulation

Starting in 2026, the maximum national subsidy for electric passenger cars in South Korea will increase from 5.8 million won to 6.8 million won, contingent on replacing an internal combustion engine vehicle and receiving an additional conversion support payment of up to 1 million won. The Ministry of Climate, Energy and Environment has introduced this subsidy reform plan to sustain the growth trend in electric vehicle adoption after a stagnation period in 2023-2024, supported by a total budget of 1.5953 trillion won allocated to various electric vehicle categories and conversion incentives.

The new conversion support payment applies to internal combustion vehicles used for more than three years, excluding hybrid vehicles and certain transfers between family members. Alongside passenger cars, subsidies will now also support small electric passenger vans and medium- to large-class electric commercial vehicles, with increased maximum subsidies ranging from 15 million won to 60 million won depending on vehicle type and use, including a special payment for school transport vans.

Performance and price standards for subsidy eligibility will become stricter from 2026, including raised charging speed and battery energy density requirements. The full subsidy price threshold for small-class electric commercial vehicles is set at 85 million won, while that for electric passenger cars is lowered from 53 million won to 50 million won. Additional support will be provided for advanced charging technologies such as vehicle-to-load (V2L), payment-and-charge (PnC), and vehicle-to-grid (V2G) functions.

To ensure sustainability and prevent abuse of subsidies, the government will evaluate not only electric vehicle deployment but also the roles and contributions of manufacturers and importers starting July 2026. A new safety requirement mandates electric vehicle fire safety insurance to cover third-party damages during parking and charging. Additional subsidy support of 2 million won will be granted for vehicles equipped with wheelchair boarding equipment to aid transportation-disadvantaged individuals.

The Ministry plans to collect public and industry feedback on the subsidy reform and release detailed evaluation criteria by March, with implementation from July. These measures aim to accelerate the transition from internal combustion engines to electric vehicles and support the growth of a sustainable domestic electric vehicle ecosystem.

Succession at the Crossroads: Scenarios for North Korea’s Future

38 North | English | AcademicThink | Jan. 2, 2026 | North Korea

The increasing visibility of Kim Jong Un’s daughter, Kim Ju Ae, amid uncertainties about his health, has sparked speculation about North Korea’s future leadership. While her public role is unprecedented and may hint at succession plans, historical patterns suggest caution, as previous transitions involved complex elite management, propaganda, and military demonstrations to establish legitimacy. A female successor would face notable challenges in DPRK’s patriarchal society, whereas a male heir might receive broader acceptance but still requires political and military credentials. The timing and nature of the succession process could vary, resembling either a lengthy apprenticeship like Kim Jong Il’s or a rapid ascendancy as with Kim Jong Un.

Past successions in North Korea showed distinct approaches shaped by differing domestic and international contexts. Kim Jong Il’s rise (1970s-1994) occurred during a relatively stable era that allowed gradual consolidation of power through ideological campaigns linking his legitimacy to his father Kim Il Sung. In contrast, Kim Jong Un’s succession (2008-2011) happened amid international isolation and economic challenges, with his father accelerating the transfer of power due to deteriorating health, elevating a new generation of loyal elites while sidelining old guard figures like Jang Song-thaek.

Military leadership credentials have been critical in legitimizing North Korean rulers. Kim Jong Il bypassed direct military experience by leveraging propaganda tied to his father’s legacy and instituted “military-first” policies to reinforce his regime. Kim Jong Un lacked traditional military credentials and instead “invented” military authority early on through appointments and demonstrations of force, such as the 2010 Yeonpyeong artillery strike and subsequent missile tests, to consolidate control and signal regime strength.

Current internal dynamics reveal a potential rivalry between Kim Ju Ae and Kim Jong Un’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, who holds significant party influence and is considered a viable immediate successor if Kim Jong Un dies suddenly. However, ideological norms favoring male heirs and generational transfer theories elevate Kim Ju Ae’s candidacy over Kim Yo Jong’s long-term prospects. The existence of a possible son adds complexity, as patriarchal norms could make a male successor more acceptable. Kim Jong Un himself faces the delicate task of empowering a successor without undermining his own authority, a balancing act influenced by lessons from past transitions and the risk of accelerated power shifts.

Signs of an emerging succession process may include intensified propaganda showcasing the successor’s military and political roles, reorganization of elites loyal to the heir, and policy initiatives aimed at consolidating power and addressing socio-economic and security challenges. The successor will likely continue “military-first” policies, using military demonstrations both as legitimacy tools and means to suppress dissent within the armed forces. Resistance from within the military could lead to further purges to solidify control.

Several scenarios could unfold: in the short term, a politically established figure like Kim Yo Jong might take over in the event of Kim Jong Un’s sudden incapacitation, while younger heirs remain unprepared. If a male heir emerges, patriarchal societal norms suggest the female successor’s prospects diminish. Even though the number of women in leadership roles has increased, significant political power remains unlikely for female delegates under existing structures, with conservative party factions poised to influence succession outcomes.

Understanding the historical patterns and tactical dynamics of past North Korean successions is crucial for anticipating future developments. While no succession process is predetermined, recognizing indicators such as elite reshuffling, propaganda shifts, and military activity can help policymakers prepare for potential transitions. A nuanced grasp of these factors will support more proactive and informed international responses, mitigating risks and seizing opportunities during North Korea’s eventual leadership change.

English disclosure requirement for listed firms to expand, 'Yellow Envelope' law to take effect in 2026

Joongang Ilbo | English | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | Regulation

Starting May 1, 2026, a larger number of Korean listed companies will be required to submit regulatory filings in English. The threshold for mandatory English disclosures will expand from firms on the Kospi with assets of 10 trillion won or more to those with assets of at least 2 trillion won. This aims to enhance transparency and accessibility for foreign investors, improving the competitiveness of the local capital market.

In March 2026, the "Yellow Envelope" law, a revision to the Labor Union Act, will take effect. This law is designed to protect the bargaining rights of indirectly employed subcontractor workers and bans companies from suing unionized workers for damages or seeking provisional seizures—practices previously used to suppress strikes. The legislation is expected to increase compliance burdens, particularly for large conglomerates and foreign firms relying heavily on subcontracting.

The minimum wage in Korea will rise by 2.9 percent to 10,320 won per hour in 2026, raising the minimum monthly labor cost to 2.15 million won. Additionally, the government plans to expand tax incentives for reshoring Korean companies and extend eligibility to firms that downsize overseas operations within four years after establishing or expanding domestic facilities.

Foreign companies operating liaison offices in Korea will face stricter regulatory compliance, including fines of up to 10 million won for failing to submit required status reports or providing false information under newly introduced rules.

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