S. Korea to strictly enforce 5-day vehicle restriction system for public sector

South Korea Introduces Mandatory Vehicle Restriction System to Address Oil Supply Concerns
S. Korea to strictly enforce 5-day vehicle restriction system for public sector

Seoul, March 24 (IANS) The government will strictly enforce a mandatory five-day vehicle restriction system for the public sector to respond to possible oil supply disruption amid persisting tensions in the Middle East while implementing additional energy-saving measures, the climate ministry said on Tuesday.

Starting Wednesday, the government will beef up monitoring of the public sector's compliance with the five-day driving restriction system, under which cars are divided into five groups based on their license plate numbers and each group is prohibited from driving on a designated weekday, according to the Ministry of Climate, Energy and Environment.

The system has been in place but run loosely. Electric and hydrogen vehicles are exempt from such restrictions, reports Yonhap news agency.

In detail, the ministry will distribute a detailed guideline on the public sector's implementation of the system and push for penalties against public institutions that fail to comply with the rules.

The government will advise the private sector to voluntarily participate in the program amid growing uncertainties surrounding crude supplies, and consider making the system mandatory for the private sector as well if a Level 3 national resource crisis alert is issued for oil supply.

The ministry said it decided to adopt such a system as the government raised the alert last week over a possible disruption in the crude oil supply by a notch to Level 2 in South Korea's four-tier national resource security crisis warning system.

It will also ask the top 50 companies in terms of oil consumption to devise energy-saving plans and provide incentives to those who meet energy consumption reduction targets while calling on public institutions and large corporations to temporarily adjust working hours to help even out traffic demand for effective energy consumption.

Additionally, the government will ease restrictions on coal-fired power generation on days with low fine dust levels and push for swift operation resumptions of five nuclear reactors currently under maintenance as part of efforts to reduce consumption of liquefied natural gas (LNG), which is also affected by the Mideast crisis.

—IANS

na/

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