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S. Korea to support shipbuilding projects involving Arctic routes

By IANS | Updated: September 11, 2025 13:30 IST

Seoul, Sep 11 The government will provide financial support for projects aimed at building icebreakers that will run ...

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Seoul, Sep 11 The government will provide financial support for projects aimed at building icebreakers that will run through Arctic shipping routes, the oceans minister said on Thursday, as South Korea plans to begin pilot operations on the envisioned Northern shipping corridors next year.

"We will invest 11 billion won ($8 million) per vessel built with icebreaking capabilities for operation on the Arctic shipping routes," Minister Chun Jae-soo said in a press conference, noting the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries has allocated funds for the project in next year's ministry budget.

Chun projected that icebreakers will be able to operate in the Arctic corridors in earnest from 2030, citing a study conducted by Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), one of South Korea's top tech universities, reports Yonhap news agency.

The ministry has earmarked a budget of 7.3 trillion won, including 1.66 trillion won for expanding and enhancing port infrastructure in the southeastern region in anticipation of the expansion of the Northern shipping routes, for its 2026 operations.

The Lee Jae Myung administration has pledged to make the southeastern port city of Busan and the surrounding region in the south into a global maritime hub.

To this end, the government plans to relocate the headquarters of the oceans ministry to Busan by the end of this year. The ministry currently sits in the central administrative city of Sejong, along with most other central government ministries.

Chun said the ministry will begin renovating the building in Busan to be used as its new headquarters next month, calling the relocation the "first step" in transforming the southern region into a global maritime hub.

The ministry will also encourage local shipping companies to relocate to Busan, as well, partly by offering various incentives, while working to establish a new maritime court and an investment corporation for the southeastern region in the city, according to Chun.

Additionally, Chun plans to head a government task force that will prepare the country for the envisioned era of Arctic shipping routes, while pushing for the creation of a public-private committee and a support organization for related projects, he added.

Further, the ministry will push to exempt preliminary feasibility studies for the development of core technologies in autonomous ships powered by artificial intelligence (AI).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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