How Many Online Government Services Have Been Restored After the Data Centre Fire in South Korea?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- 33.6% of online services restored so far.
- Fire caused by lithium-ion battery explosion.
- Recovery includes critical services for users.
- Government's swift action to restore functionality.
- Investigation into the fire's cause is ongoing.
Seoul, Oct 11 (NationPress) Over 33 percent of the government’s online administrative services impacted by a fire at a state data centre last month have been successfully restored, officials reported on Saturday.
As of 6 a.m., 238 out of 709 services affected by the fire at the National Information Resources Service (NIRS) in Daejeon have been brought back online, indicating a restoration rate of 33.6 percent, according to Yonhap news agency.
The Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters confirmed that the newly restored services encompass the privacy regulator’s functionality for monitoring personal data leaks and the labor ministry’s system for managing fines.
Currently, 30 out of 40 essential “Grade 1” services, which are critical based on user impact and demand, have been restored.
The fire at NIRS ignited due to an explosion of a lithium-ion battery in a server room on Sept. 26 and was fully extinguished the following day. Authorities are investigating the precise cause of the incident.
Among the services that have returned to operation are the Public Procurement Service’s next-generation comprehensive shopping mall, the interior ministry’s central permanent records management system, the finance ministry’s National Assembly business support system, and the land ministry’s real estate administration intelligence system.
During the extended week of Chuseok festivities that commenced last Friday, a total of 47 systems were restored to normal functionality. The fire, which started from a lithium-ion battery explosion, caused significant disruption.
On Friday, President Lee Jae Myung visited the state data centre that was severely affected by the fire to oversee recovery initiatives, as per the presidential office.
Lee’s visit to the National Information Resources Service in Daejeon coincided with the government’s intensified efforts to restore online services following the fire, which compromised essential data storage systems.