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Assessing the impact of R&D policy on PV market development: The case of South Korea

Authors
Ha, Yoon-HeeByrne, JohnLee, Hae-SeokLee, Ye-JinKim, Dong-Hwan
Issue Date
3월-2020
Publisher
WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
Keywords
energy policy; energy R& D; Korea solar policy; solar energy; solar markets
Citation
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT, v.9, no.2
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume
9
Number
2
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/57452
DOI
10.1002/wene.366
ISSN
2041-8396
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to examine the Korean photovoltaic (PV) R&D strategy and its effectiveness in helping Korean manufacturer competitiveness. The article reviewed the Korean government's PV R&D funding from 2008 to 2017 and investigated the technology readiness levels of 298 R&D projects funded by the Korean government during the same period. It is found that the Korean government followed a two-track approach of nurturing commercialization technology to cope with rapid growth and volatility in the current global market. The effects of government support for market-ready and next-generation technologies in order to position the country in today's competition and to prepare it for "first mover" opportunities in emerging markets are considered. During 2008-2017, Korean manufacturers maintained a 7% of market share. Module prices, which were more than USD 6 per watt in 2000, fell to less than USD 1 in 2017. From a technical point of view, silicon-based modules have achieved world-class status in their efficiency. Performance of the country's nonsilicon technologies reached nearly 90% of the world's best nonsilicon products in the early 2010s, but recently, next-generation technology development is lagging. Despite Korean PV industry's achievements, it is unclear whether Korean government PV R&D strategy affected competitiveness. Since 2013, the Korean government has sharply cut PV R&D funding. Early growth may have been affected by government support, but recent growth may be driven by corporate strategies. A significantly higher level of R&D funding may be needed for Korea's next-generation technologies to capture "first mover" status. This article is categorized under: Energy and Climate > Economics and Policy Photovoltaics > Economics and Policy Energy Policy and Planning > Economics and Policy
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Graduate School of Energy and Environment (KU-KIST GREEN SCHOOL) > Department of Energy and Environment > 1. Journal Articles

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