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Date : February 28, 2018
NK export electricity to China for cash
   http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?num=15034&cataId=nk01500 [1183]
In blackout North Korea, authorities export electricity to China for cash


On February 9, the State Affairs Commission-- according to North Korea's constitution it is the "supreme state organ of policy direction of state sovereignty-- revealed that some of the electricity being produced by a hydroelectric dam in North Pyongan Province is being sold to China. Although North Korea struggles with electricity shortages, the export of hydropower is seen as an attempt by the regime to maintain its financial lifelines. It is estimated that the regime earns between US $60,000 - $100,000 per month from these energy sales. 

The State Affairs Commission ratified an agreement to send electricity to China on February 9 and it is currently being sent there, said an inside source from North Pyongan Province during a telephone call with Daily NK on February 22. The Supong Hydroelectric Generator in Sakju County is providing the energy to a Chinese factory that produces fire proofing materials. The [North Korean] authorities are accepting payments in the form of cash. 

Existing international sanctions ban North Korea from exporting coal and minerals, and place hard limits on additional deployments of overseas laborers. The sale of electricity is seen as a measure of last resort by the cash-hungry central authorities. 

The name for the strategic export project is also significant, dubbed The January 8 Fund, (Kim Jong Uns birthday) according to the source. There is historical precedent for this. Kim Jong Uns father, Kim Jong Il, also had a strategic currency-earning project named after his birthday - The February 16 Fund. 

This move highlights the regimes continued attempts to overcome sanctions by any means necessary. The strategy capitalizes on the fact that electricity exports are not expressly forbidden by international sanctions. The source said that the North Korean side convinced the Chinese to purchase the electricity due to the steep discounts on offer.

In the end, it will be the North Korean people who lose the most from such transactions. Despite the impoverished countrys chronic power shortages, the regime has chosen to export electricity to earn money for itself. 

[Source: Daily NK]

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