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South Korea on supply chains, oil prices amid Russia-Ukraine crisis

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South Korea is monitoring the Russia-Ukraine crisis closely to assess its impact on energy prices, or possible disruptions to supply chains, its trade minister told CNBC.

“I think first, we are closely monitoring a spike in the energy prices,” Yeo Han-koo said, adding that as much as 92% of South Korea’s needs are being met by energy imports.

“Some of these supply chains in [the] manufacturing sector could be also exposed to these potential geopolitical risks,” he told CNBC’s Chery Kang. “So we are taking all these policy measures to meet this potential risk.”

Tensions between Russia and Ukraine have spiked in recent months as Russia built up troops along its border with Ukraine.

A senior Biden administration official said Wednesday that many as 7,000 troops have joined the 150,000 already near the border in recent days. That’s despite claims by the Russian government a day earlier, that the Kremlin was starting a partial drawdown of its troops along the Ukrainian border, and returning them to their base.

We believe that no one country can own the whole supply chain in semiconductor or any other industry.

Yeo Han-koo

South Korea’s finance minister

The military tensions have sparked concerns that Russia may be preparing to invade the country, and set off fears of a repeat of the Kremlin’s illegal annexation and occupation of Crimea in 2014. Moscow has repeatedly denied those allegations.

Gas as well as oil prices have shot up on the back of those tensions, but were trading lower on Thursday.

‘Early warning system’ for supply chains

‘No one country’ owns chip supply chains

As the global chip shortage drags on, Yeo called for international cooperation to resolve the problem.

South Korea’s tech giant Samsung, together with Taiwan’s TSMC, currently dominate the world’s chip production.

“Korean companies play a very important role in this semiconductor supply chain,” Yeo said. “We believe that no one country can own the whole supply chain in semiconductor or any other industry.”

An ongoing supply crunch for chips has hurt production across a number of industries — ranging from…

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