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The Korea Herald
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THE INVESTOR
November 30, 2024

Market Now

SK invests $250m in Bill Gates’ TerraPower

  • PUBLISHED :August 18, 2022 - 16:22
  • UPDATED :August 18, 2022 - 16:22
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SK Group headquarters in central Seoul (SK Inc.)

SK Group, South Korea’s second-largest conglomerate, has invested $250 million in Bill Gates’ small nuclear power reactor developer TerraPower in an effort to cut down global carbon emissions and build up the group’s green energy portfolio, officials said Monday.

According to the group’s announcement, SK Inc. and SK Innovation became co-lead investors of TerraPower’s investment attraction plan worth $750 million along with Gates. The Korean companies’ investment was recently completed after obtaining approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States under the Treasury Department.

With the investment, SK said the group will take part in TerraPower’s project of commercializing small nuclear power reactors, also known as next-generational small modular reactors, to take the lead in realizing carbon neutrality through securing carbon-free electricity in South Korea and Southeast Asia.

SK’s spending marked the largest single investment in the next generational nuclear reactor industry so far, according to the group.

Gates co-founded TerraPower in 2008. The company developed the designs of sodium-cooled fast reactor technology, regarded as fourth-generation nuclear reactor technology. The SFR technology is known for drastically decreasing nuclear waste while maintaining a high level of safety.

With financial support from the US Department of Energy, TerraPower is currently working to commercialize its first SFR in the US by 2028.

SK also highlighted TerraPower’s production technology of Actinium-225, an alpha-emitting radionuclide that has raised high hopes for treating cancer without damaging normal cells.

Through the cooperation with TerraPower and bio firms SK has invested in, the group said it expects to uncover various business opportunities in the field of biopharmaceutical including the development of treatments and contract manufacturing organization.

This week, the Microsoft founder is visiting South Korea for the first time in nine years. His three-day trip, from Monday through Wednesday, includes a sit-down with President Yoon Suk-yeol and a speaking session at the National Assembly.

According to local reports, Gates is expected to visit the group’s vaccine maker SK Bioscience’s research and development center in Pangyo, Gyeonggi Province. There has not been any response from Gates or any South Korean firms regarding speculations that the tech billionaire would meet with the country’s key business leaders such as Lee Jae-yong of Samsung or Chey Tae-won of SK.

By Kan Hyeong-woo (hwkan@heraldcorp.com)

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