Korea-EU Forge 'Digital Alliance' to Penetrate 450M Consumer Market, Expanding Economic Territory with $165M Investment

Global Economic Times Reporter

korocamia@naver.com | 2026-06-11 10:23:31


SEOUL / BRUSSELS — South Korea and the European Union (EU) have forged a monumental "digital economic alliance," integrating cutting-edge technology, digital commerce, and critical supply chains. Amid the intensifying tech hegemony race between the United States and China, Seoul has significantly expanded its sovereign data economic territory by securing access to a massive single market encompassing 450 million consumers and a gross domestic product (GDP) of €18 trillion.

According to the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy on June 11, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, European Council President António Costa, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attended the official signing ceremony of the Korea-EU Digital Trade Agreement (DTA) on June 10 (local time) in Brussels, Belgium. The pact was signed by Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo and EU Executive Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič. This marks South Korea's second bilateral DTA and its first digital-exclusive trade agreement with a top-five global trading partner.

The core of the agreement lies in the liberalization of data business through the eradication of entry barriers. Upon entry into force, requirements for computing facilities and localized data storage will be strictly prohibited. Consequently, South Korean firms entering the EU's $3.32 trillion digital services market will no longer need to construct costly local data centers, allowing them to manage data seamlessly from domestic servers.

Furthermore, the DTA establishes a robust institutional shield safeguarding the intellectual property of K-content creators and big tech corporations by banning forced transfers of software source code. It also includes comprehensive trade facilitation measures, such as strengthening e-commerce consumer rights, enhancing cross-border cooperation on cybersecurity, and standardizing e-invoicing and digital payment systems.

The expansion of digital sovereignty immediately triggered tangible advancements in physical supply chains, securing $165 million (approx. 250 billion KRW) in foreign direct investment (FDI) from four leading European high-tech corporations. Germany's advanced materials firm Orafol will expand its facilities in Korea as an APAC export hub, while France's quantum computing pioneer Quandela will establish an R&D and manufacturing base. Additionally, Dutch module manufacturer Prodrive Technologies will set up its first Korean subsidiary to join the semiconductor supply chain, and Sweden's Mycronic has designated Korea as its Asian research hub.

To structurally oversee these achievements and counter rising protectionism—such as the EU's Critical Raw Materials Act (CRMA)—the two sides officially launched the "Competitiveness Partnership" and established the High-Level Economic Dialogue (HLED). This grants Seoul a crucial diplomatic lever to directly engage in the EU's major industrial policymaking processes, safeguarding its $130 billion bilateral trade relationship.

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