Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
108544
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
This report provides an overview of the present status of the DPRK power sector
that includes newly analyzed data and future prospects of electricity supply and
demand in North Korea as well as establishes several basic inter-Korean energy
cooperation plans. South Korean policies to improve this difficult situation should
be implemented to overcome the DPRK electricity shortage. However, because of
the strong political backlash caused by the North Korean attacks on the Cheonan
corvette and Yeonpyeong Island in 2010, all cooperation, including energy cooperation between the two Koreas, has stopped. Nevertheless, a basic plan to solve
the DPRK energy crisis should be continuously discussed and established by the
ROK, considering the total potential costs of reunification and the peace and stability of the Korean peninsula. Therefore this report also considers possible
changes in inter-Korean relations as a result of electric power system interactions
and is intended to be a starting point for the establishment of necessary plans for
the interconnection of the power systems of the two Koreas and the fulfillment of
longstanding grand plans for a Unified Korean Power System (UKPS).
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2 |
ID:
108537
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
As the United States and South Korea expressed solidarity in blaming North
Korea for its attack on the South Korean warship Cheonan, followed by North
Korea's artillery attack on Yeonpyeong Island, and in imposing further sanctions
on North Korea, global attention is now focused on China with regard to whether
it will cooperate in imposing punitive measures on its ally. Despite the worsening
cleavages between China and North Korea since October 2006 when the latter
tested its nuclear weapons, this study shows that their relations have remained
robust in the economic context although they are experiencing a political transition. This paper begins with Sino-DPRK relations by exploring the status of the
alliance in transition in the political and military context. Further, it considers the
economic context between the two nations by reviewing Chinese aid to North
Korea and North Korea's trade data, using the "flow of goods" as a proxy for
"flow of money." Then, this paper applies North Korea's strategic interaction
with the United States in the game-theoretic methods in order to illustrate the
Chinese impact on the effectiveness of economic sanctions on North Korea. The
study found that China's role remains consequential, as the strategies of North
Korea and the United States depend on China's position.
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3 |
ID:
110524
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