South
Korea is a global leader in electronics, but little is known
about their climate change impact. Here, we estimate the direct and
indirect greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of Korean electronics by developing
a new and high-resolution (∼380 sectors) environmentally extended
input–output model, named KREEIO. We find that final demand
for Korean electronics led to nearly 8% of national GHG emissions
in 2017, mostly because of indirect emissions embodied in the electronics
supply chain. Notably, the semiconductor and display sectors contributed
3.2% and 2.4% to national emissions, with capital investment accounting
for 17% of the two sectors’ total emissions or nearly 1% of
national emissions. For other electronic products, scope 1, scope
2, and upstream scope 3 emissions on average accounted for 3%, 10%,
and 87% of a sector’s GHG intensity, respectively. Detailed
contribution analysis suggests that reducing Korean electronics GHG
emissions would benefit most from the transition to a low-carbon electricity
grid, but mitigation efforts in many other sectors such as metals
and chemicals are also important. Overall, our study underscores the
significance of electronics GHG emissions in South Korea, especially
those from semiconductors and displays, and the mitigation challenges
these sectors face as demand continue to grow globally