Seoul May Force Private Cars Off Roads If Oil Hits $130 Amid Middle East Crisis

South Korea's Finance Minister has indicated the government could enforce a mandatory five-day vehicle rotation system on the private sector if global oil prices climb to $120-$130 per barrel. This warning follows the recent escalation of the national resource crisis alert to Level 2 due to potential crude supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict. The government is concurrently preparing a substantial supplementary budget of 25 trillion won to cushion the impact of high oil prices on SMEs and vulnerable households. Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan has also urged business associations to cooperate with voluntary energy-saving measures and secure alternative supply chains.

Key Points: Seoul May Expand Car Rotation to Private Sector If Oil Hits $130

  • Mandatory car rotation may expand to private sector
  • Trigger is oil at $120-$130 per barrel
  • Government preparing $16.6bn support package
  • Aim is to save energy amid Middle East turmoil
2 min read

Oil crisis: Seoul hints at expanding vehicle rotation system to private sector

South Korea warns of mandatory 5-day vehicle rotation for private cars if oil prices surge to $120-$130 a barrel amid Middle East conflict.

"If the situation worsens, we may have to raise the national resource crisis alert to Level 3. - Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol"

Seoul, March 29

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said on Sunday that the government could expand a mandatory five-day vehicle rotation system to the private sector if global oil prices rise to US$120-130 per barrel as part of nationwide energy-saving efforts amid an escalating conflict in the Middle East.

"If the situation worsens, we may have to raise the national resource crisis alert to Level 3," Koo told a KBS television interview. "In that case, we would extend the vehicle rotation system to the private sector and seek public cooperation."

The finance minister said the government will closely monitor developments in every aspect, noting that a rise to $120-$130 could trigger a Level 3 alert from the current $100-$110 level, reports Yonhap news agency.

His remarks came after the government last week raised the alert by one notch to Level 2 under its four-tier national resource security crisis warning system, citing potential disruptions to crude oil supplies.

At the same time, it enforced a mandatory five-day vehicle rotation system for the public sector while asking the private sector to voluntarily participate in the program.

The system restricts vehicles from operating one day out of every five business days based on the last digit of their license plate numbers.

The government is also working on a supplementary budget worth 25 trillion won (US$16.6 billion) to help ease the burden of rising oil prices and support small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as vulnerable households affected by the prolonged conflict.

The ruling Democratic Party and the government have agreed to submit the bill to the National Assembly later this week.

Meanwhile, Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan has called for private sector cooperation to help stabilise industrial supply chains and manage energy demands amid persisting turmoil in the Middle East, his office said.

In a meeting with major business associations, Kim urged companies to step up efforts to secure alternative supply sources and refrain from disruptive actions, such as collusion and hoarding, according to the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources.

The meeting was attended by senior officials from six business associations, including the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Federation of Middle Market Enterprises of Korea.

Kim also called for voluntary participation by private companies in a five-day vehicle rotation system and other energy-saving measures.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
A vehicle rotation system for the private sector would be very disruptive for daily commuters and small businesses. While saving energy is crucial, the economic impact needs careful study. Hope they provide good public transport alternatives.
V
Vikram M
Global conflicts affecting oil prices is a reality we in India know too well. 🇮🇳 A ₹25,000 crore supplementary budget to help vulnerable groups is a good move by Seoul. We need similar targeted relief when our petrol prices soar, not just empty promises.
P
Priya S
Asking companies to secure alternative supply sources is easier said than done. The whole world scrambles for the same alternatives during a crisis. Long-term solution is to reduce dependence on fossil fuels, full stop.
R
Rohit P
The license plate-based system seems fair on paper, but what about people who need their car for work every day? Delivery agents, salespeople, doctors on call... A one-size-fits-all rule rarely works. Hope they have exemptions.
K
Kavya N
Respectfully, while the intention is good, enforcing this on the private sector could backfire. It might lead to people buying a second car with a different plate number, defeating the purpose entirely. We've seen similar loopholes exploited in Delhi's odd-even scheme.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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