Inside the Government's All-Out Push for Three Mega Projects: A Breakdown
원본 (Korean)
Translation + Context
FT = ForbiddenTome — tap to see Korean slang explained

Overview
"3 Major Mega Projects' Power Supply, Renewable Energy and Nuclear Power Will Handle It" Southwest Semiconductor Industrial Complex, Abundant Renewable Energy and Nuclear Power Utilization Power Supply AI Data Center, Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Some Fossil Fuel Power Generation Harmoniously Utilized Yongin Semiconductor Industrial Complex, Maximize Existing Transmission Lines... When Unavoidable, Rapid Power Grid Construction Through Underground Lines, Etc.
Reporter Byeon Guk-young Input 2026.06.29 19:07 Comments 0

Against
The government should immediately stop undemocratic entrance to mountain lodges

Semiconductors
Government "Honam semiconductor can use 1 million tons of water per day" ... Infrastructure 2 trillion won investment Gwangju and Jeollanam-do cities can use full annual support funds


"Ministry of Climate turned into corporate support department... Environmental groups oppose 3 major mega projects
2026.06.29 18:32 Input Reporter O Kyung-min

Building a system to nurture 2,000 'Honam semiconductor specialized talents' annually
Reporter Seo Mi-ae

From 0:00 on Day 1, acquiring legal status... Operating 27 cities/districts/counties under a single administrative system. Mayor position elevated to 'ministerial level' · attendance at cabinet meetings... Establishing a 4-member vice-minister-level vice-mayor system. Government financial incentive bomb support of 20 trillion won... Massive investment in infrastructure for 'Samsung·SK Hynix investment'


The Southwest region's mega semiconductor investment is unprecedented in Korean history.
It's safe to say the nation's economic future literally depends on it,
so Samsung, SK, and the Korean government are all-in on making this succeed.
If these 3 mega projects succeed, the payoff will be insane, but there are still massive hurdles to clear.
Basically:
1. Power grid issues
2. Ultra-pure industrial water supply
3. Talent acquisition
1. Solving the power grid problem.
Power will come primarily from renewables and nuclear.
The government's plan: tap Honam's abundant green energy and nuclear power—plus SMRs (small modular reactors)—to supply 6.3 gigawatts or more to the Southwest semiconductor complex.
For the AI data center, they're adding coal power to the mix too, on top of renewables and nuclear.
Translation: if nuclear isn't enough, they'll use everything and anything.
They're also rolling out regional electricity pricing tiers—basically, using locally-produced power in these tech hubs gets you a discount.
More transmission lines are going in too. Though residents are definitely not happy about it...
But what choice does the government have? They've gotta do it.
They're trying to sweeten the deal with undergrounding power lines where possible.
2. Securing ultra-pure industrial water.
Semiconductor manufacturing needs insane amounts of water—for wafer cleaning and cooling. The Southwest complex alone will need about 650,000 tons a day.
Building basic water infrastructure? Astronomical costs ahead.
According to Korea Water Resources Corporation: they're gonna drain every spare drop from Southwest dams, plus raid dams earmarked for power and agriculture.
They're even considering raising dam heights to pull in more water.
Naturally, environmental groups are losing their minds.
Honestly, you need at least a few of these activists to feel like a real developed country operation.
3. Talent acquisition
The Education Ministry designated 2 new meister high schools in South Jeolla Province—both focused on AI and semiconductor curricula. They'll start producing graduates by 2030.
With GIST and Amkor already in the region, talent is the least of our worries compared to power and water. We're all the same Korean people anyway—pay us right and we'll go anywhere.
- Gwangju-Jeolla Special City's 20 Trillion Won Bullet
The government dropped 20 trillion won on Gwangju-Jeolla Special City.
Getting hit with this money bomb, the city declared it'll pour funds into roads and infrastructure.
The city council's first resolution: the "Global Semiconductor Strategic Investment Support Ordinance."
Both the government and the special city are so desperate to make this a done deal that they're going all-in on speed.
- Government's legal support
They stripped the Seoul Capital Area exclusion clause from the Semiconductor Special Act and added preferential language for non-capital regions.
The old exclusion clause faced heavy backlash from the Gyeonggi semiconductor belt.
Just last week, the revised law now lets Gyeonggi's semiconductor belt access 50%+ government subsidies for power and water infrastructure costs.
Based on the timing, you gotta wonder if there wasn't some kind of deal made in exchange for the Honam investment.
The government sees this as the launchpad for solving Seoul's overcentralization—a total national reset.
For an investment this historically massive, that makes sense.
These 3 mega projects represent the government mobilizing every ounce of national capacity.
Once you set the stage like this, you can't just pull back once you start digging.
As a Korean, I genuinely hope this mega project succeeds.
It sounds reckless as hell, but innovation is how Korea's always squeezed in between superpowers—I believe we can pull this off.
A great company's words, spoken of a Korea that rose from the ashes of division to become industrialized,
will close out this piece.
Hey. Ever tried it?
Here's to the success of Korean companies and the 3 mega projects.

Ministry of Land: So Seoul, you're saying we can use half the rebar from now on? ^^
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7 comments
Please don't just blow through all the money by the end...
Back in the 60s when they started the nuclear program, people said, 'What nuclear power in a dirt-poor country with no electricity demand? Use that money to rebuild after the war instead.' Then in the 70s-80s, every major project that built today's infrastructure—the Gyeongbu Expressway, Pohang Steel, everything—was branded as 'insane,' 'shouldn't be done,' 'ripping out the roots.' You can't forget that. Finding reasons NOT to do something is easy, but if you understand why it MUST be done anyway, you can't really object. Similar historical parallel (though it ultimately failed): 'two-front warfare is absolutely bad strategy and should never be attempted'—anyone with even basic history knowledge would agree. But in early 1900s Germany: α) geography meant if war started, two-front warfare was inevitable, β) so they had to prepare for something they knew was insane, γ) hence the Schlieffen Plan—brutally simple, just beat France fast then rush east for Tannenberg. Same logic applies to Korea: α) 70% of the population squeezed into 25% of land is an already-given condition, β) not fixing this means disaster one way or another—power grid collapse, population decline, whatever—that's the condition we're in, γ) so pointing out 'reasons NOT to do this' is just sitting around slowly committing suicide or hoping solutions magically fall from the sky.
ok but why didn't they just pick ONE project and do it right instead of spreading themselves thin across three mega projects??
The government really said 'go big or go home' huh... taxpayers gonna have a field day with this one
The real issue isn't the business itself—it's that you don't want Jeolla to develop. You're fine with Gyeongbuk and Chungcheong booming, but Jeolla developing? That's the problem. If power and water were the issue, why build in Yongin then? If supply chain companies are the bottleneck, they'd follow to Jeolla too. Did Samsung's Vietnam plant have supply chains because of some inherent advantage? No. But everyone's absolutely FINE with that. People talk about regional balance but lose it over Jeolla getting a megaproject. Yet you're fine relocating the capital (lost that fight) while big corporations expanding there? That's apparently unacceptable. Double standards much?
wait so they're actually going through with ALL THREE at once? that's insane lol, where's the budget even coming from 💀
Finally some infrastructure getting done, about time honestly. Curious to see if they actually finish these or just abandon halfway like always
this is the kind of ambition I respect, whether it works out or completely falls apart will be hilarious to watch 😂
honestly the breakdown in that article was actually really helpful, at least they're transparent about what's happening for once