South Korea ordered sweltering government offices to turn off their air conditioning as two power plants stopped operations,a day after a minister warned of an imminent national energy crisis.
The timing could hardly be worse with South Korea in the grip of an extended heatwave and temperatures nudging 34 degrees Celsius. One Seoul city government employee described her office as one big dimsum basket.
The heatwave is also smashing records in Japan,where the mercury hit 41 degrees Celsius Monday. The coal-powered Dangjin III plant,with a capacity of 500 megawatts,was taken offline Monday by mechanical issues and will likely remain shut for a week,a spokesman for the state power distributor Korea Power Exchange (KPE) said.
Technical problems also shut down the nearby Seocheon plant. Although operations resumed after an hour,the plant,also coal-fired,is only working at half its 200-megawatt capacity,the spokesman said.
The shutdowns come amid a lengthy disruption in South Koreas nuclear power sector.
We are facing potentially our worst power crisis, Trade,Industry and Energy Minister Yoon Sang-Jick said Sunday. We may have to carry out a rolling blackout… if one single power plant goes out of operation, Yoon said,appealing to factories,households and shops to curb consumption over the next three days.
The last time the Seoul government was forced to resort to nationwide load shedding was in September 2011,when unexpectedly high demand pushed power reserves to their lowest level in decades.
The unannounced blackouts hit more than six million households and businesses and left 3,000 people trapped in elevators.
The resulting outcry forced the then-energy minister to resign.