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Updated Jun 30, 2026 · 14:46
World News Updated Jun 30, 2026

South Korea's President Hails Samsung, SK Chiefs as 'National Heroes' in $583B AI Chip Drive

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has hailed Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong and SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won as "national heroes" during a push for a massive 900 trillion won semiconductor investment project. The government is backing an initiative to build a new semiconductor production belt outside the Seoul metropolitan area to leverage the global AI boom. The plan aims to double the nation's DRAM production capacity within five years through a "3S+1F" strategy focusing on speed, stronghold, and spearhead. Samsung and SK Group have unveiled domestic investment plans totaling 881 trillion won, including new memory fabs and advanced packaging facilities.

South Korean President hails Samsung, SK leaders as 'National Heroes' in USD 583 billion AI chip drive

Seoul, June 30

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung labeled Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong and SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won "national heroes" during a push for a massive 900 trillion won semiconductor investment project.

According to a news report by The Korea Herald, the South Korean government is backing an extensive initiative to build a new semiconductor production belt outside the Seoul metropolitan area to leverage the global artificial intelligence boom. The plan aims to double the nation's DRAM (dynamic random-access memory) production capacity within five years by establishing a "3S+1F" strategy focused on speed, stronghold, and spearhead.

At a presidential public briefing on the government's three megaprojects, Samsung Electronics and SK Group unveiled domestic investment plans totaling 881 trillion won (~USD 660.8 billion). This includes the construction of four memory fabs in the southwest region and advanced high-bandwidth memory packaging facilities in North and South Chungcheong provinces.

The initiative seeks to expand the country's manufacturing footprint beyond the capital region as existing production sites face severe resource limitations.

"Companies pursue profit, but they have also shown they can act for the future of the nation," the news report quoted President Lee Jae Myung.

"Korea can no longer rely on a single capital-region chip belt," the news report quoted Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan.

Kim described semiconductors as the backbone of the AI era and Korea's last chance to escape low growth. He noted that while projects in Yongin and Pyeongtaek will be accelerated, new growth bases are needed as semiconductor sites face mounting constraints in power, water, and land. To mitigate these bottlenecks, the central government promised fast-track approvals and one-stop infrastructure support, alongside the creation of a dedicated presidential team to oversee the regional projects.

"Samsung will work to help the Korean semiconductor industry maintain its technological edge," the news report quoted Lee Jae-yong.

"Demand visible today remains strong. Even with continued investment, it will be difficult to fully resolve supply shortages," the news report quoted Chey Tae-won.

Chey pointed out that SK hynix's Yongin cluster took nine years to prepare, which highlights the critical importance of infrastructure and regulatory support for new fabs. SK Group plans to allocate about 1,100 trillion won for semiconductor expansion projects, which encompasses existing capital-region hubs and an additional 400 trillion won (~USD 300 billion) commitment in the southwest.

Citing market projections, the news report supported this aggressive expansion, with expectations that the global memory market will quadruple to USD 800 billion by 2030 from USD 200 billion in 2025.

"For Korea, the memory race is no longer just a contest between chipmakers, but a national competition over infrastructure, supply chains and speed," the Industry Ministry said.

The government also announced that the Daegu-North Gyeongsang region will be developed into an innovation hub for materials, parts, and equipment.

Furthermore, Seoul plans to invest more than 30 trillion won over the next 15 years to support the entire semiconductor cycle from research to manufacturing.

Despite the ambitious roadmap, the news report cautioned that execution remains critical, citing prior delays with SK hynix's Yongin cluster due to water supply and land compensation issues, alongside impending challenges in securing water and engineering talent for the southwest expansion.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sarah B

"National heroes" is such a strong label for corporate leaders. I wonder if that kind of hero worship is healthy, even in a country like Korea with its chaebol culture. Still, the investment numbers are staggering—881 trillion won! That's roughly Rs. 49 lakh crore. We can barely get a metro project completed on time in India.

Priya S

What I find interesting is how Korea is decentralizing its semiconductor belt. Moving beyond Seoul makes sense—land prices in Mumbai and Bangalore are also insane. But water and power constraints? That sounds familiar to anyone facing droughts in Chennai or power cuts in Delhi. Hope they've sorted logistics before promising 400 trillion won in the southwest. 🤔

Vikram M

Meanwhile, India's semiconductor mission is still stuck in paperwork. If Korea can triple down on AI chips with this speed, why can't we? We have the engineers, we have the demand—our mobile phone market alone is massive. This article shows what happens when industry, government, and academia work together.

Michael C

I respect the ambition but execution is key. The article itself mentions the Yongin cluster took nine years to prepare due to water and land issues. In India, similar infrastructure hurdles have stalled our own chip projects. Korea's fast-track approvals sound great on paper—but local resistance and environmental clearances can derail even the best plans. Let's see if they deliver.

Rohit P

Actually, I think India should partner with Korea for this AI chip drive. We could provide engineering talent and software expertise, they have the fabs. Win-win! The global memory market is expected to hit $800 billion

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

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