South Korea to Boost Household Solar via Supplementary Budget

The government announced plans to expand household renewable energy deployment through the upcoming supplementary budget, with a particular focus on small-scale solar installations for homes. Reports in Chosun Ilbo indicate this package will revive initiatives that were once scaled up under former Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, and that the broader aim is to lower long-term reliance on fossil fuels while strengthening national energy resilience.

This policy shift comes amid renewed concerns about supply stability following the Middle East energy crisis, which has heightened attention to energy security. Policymakers are framing household renewables not only as a climate or economic measure, but as a decentralised resilience strategy that can reduce vulnerability to external market shocks. According to the available reporting, that context helped push the topic back onto the government’s agenda as it assembles the supplementary budget.

One notable element the government intends to reintroduce is the veranda-style solar installation program, which had been expanded during the Park Won-soon administration but later scaled back amid political changes. The program’s revival aims to make small photovoltaic systems more accessible to apartment and multi-family households, reflecting an emphasis on democratizing access to home-based generation rather than concentrating deployment only on large-scale projects.

Details published so far are centered on the use of the supplementary budget as the funding mechanism, and major media coverage has highlighted this approach as the primary vehicle for rapid support. The government’s stated long-term objective remains a reduction in fossil fuel dependence, and the supplementary budget is being positioned as an immediate step to accelerate household adoption of solar and other small-scale renewable technologies.

How the program will be rolled out — including eligibility, subsidy levels, installation logistics, and timelines — will depend on forthcoming government announcements. The current reporting signals a political and policy pivot that could bring renewed attention, administrative resources, and public outreach to household renewables; implementation specifics, however, remain to be confirmed by official releases.

As this story develops, the move has been framed by major outlets such as Chosun Ilbo (published March 26, 2026) as a notable re-emergence of household renewables in national policy, driven by both energy security concerns and a stated commitment to reduce fossil fuel dependence over the long term.

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