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Korea Electric Power Corporation, better known as KEPCO (Korean: 켑코) or Hanjeon (Korean: 한전), is the largest electric utility in South Korea, [2] responsible for the generation, transmission and distribution of electricity and the development of electric power projects including those in nuclear power, wind power and coal.
On 30 March 2021, President Joko Widodo submitted a Presidential Letter to People's Representative Council, which contained a proposal for major changes in the national cabinet, one of which was the merger of the Ministry of Research and Technology and the Ministry of Education and Culture into one ministry named the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology.
The first K-pop concert in Indonesia was held in 2010 during Indonesia-Korea Week, where the group that attended was SHINee. Seeing the potential and enthusiasm of fans at that time, SM Entertainment brought back their artists 2 years later, in 2012 SMTown Concert succeeded filling Gelora Bung Karno in Jakarta with 50,000 people.
KEPCO's reported debt (excluding capital leases) increased to around KRW80.5 trillion at the end of 2021 from KRW69.7 trillion at the end of 2020.KEPCO's financial metrics are likely to recover to ...
Indonesia also agreed to open the service sector to Korean investment, although the agriculture, forestry and fishery sectors were excluded in the agreement. Online video games were also covered in the agreement. [1] The agreement also covers human resource development in Indonesia, [2] and technology transfers. [3]
KEPCO, as of 2014, planned to "spend US$155 million between 2015 and 2017 on developing technologies that will reduce spending on power, as well as boosting energy saving and efficiency" and set 2030 as the date to deliver universal smart grids for "power generation, distribution and consumption" and to export them to all of Southeast Asia.
The Higher Education Services Institutes (Indonesian: Lembaga Layanan Pendidikan Tinggi, LLDIKTI) is a system of institutions formed by the Indonesian government to provide guidance to both public and private universities inside the jurisdiction of Indonesia. [1]
The Indonesian branch of the Korean Muslim Federation opened in 1982; they sponsored 22 Muslims from South Korea to come to Indonesia as students in 1983 and 1984 to study in local universities and better understand Islam. According to their figures, as of 2005, there were only 50 Korean Muslims in Indonesia, including those who had converted ...