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Indonesia Economy Forum

Man with the plan for a richer Indonesia
Minister Luhut Panjaitan tells Asia Times how the nation plans to extract way more value from its mineral riches

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JAKARTA – Retired general turned businessman and politician, Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment Luhut Panjaitan may cut a controversial profile, but he is single-minded in his determination to use Indonesia’s vast natural resources to make the country part of the global supply chain.

Brushing aside widespread skepticism and the inevitable sniping about his own personal interests, the man often referred to as the “minister of anything” knows he has only the four years left in President Joko Widodo’s tenure to lay the foundation for that goal before he steps away from public life.

“One day this country is going to be very powerful,” he told the Asia Times in an extended interview, an impressive team of young professionals sitting around him at a long office table. “In ten to 15 years, Indonesia will be a very different place.”

Most analysts agree the 73-year-old Panjaitan has always possessed the ambition, drive and clout to be the nation’s president. But as a Christian, the straight-talking Sumatran batak was never going to rise to Muslim-majority Indonesia’s highest office.

Instead, he has become Widodo’s right-hand man with a bewildering array of jobs, ranging from senior political adviser to point man for Chinese investment and now the chief strategist in tackling the coronavirus pandemic that has so far claimed over 7,800 lives.


More than anything, Panjaitan’s weapon is the 2009 Mining Law, which in banning the export of unprocessed and semi-processed ore aims to boost smelting capacity and add value in a way he hopes will transform the face of Indonesia.

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Indonesian President Joko Widodo and his right-hand man Luhut Panjaitan in a file photo. Image: Facebook

When it comes to nickel, the policy has been a profound success. Starting during the previous Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono presidency, Chinese companies have so far invested more than US$11 billion in three smelter complexes at Morawali and Konawe, on the east coast of Sulawesi, and at Weda Bay, on the main Moluccan island of Halmahera.

The two eastern Indonesian islands contain most of Indonesia’s 21 million tons of nickel reserves, the largest in the world ahead of Australia, Brazil, Russia, New Caledonia, Cuba and the Philippines.
Tied to that is Panjaitan’s dream of establishing an electric vehicle industry, with South Korea car manufacturer Hyundai as an initial $1.5 billion investor and LG Chemical interested in building an associated lithium battery plant on the same site near Jakarta.

One of the motivations is the European Union’s intention to phase out diesel and petrol cars, in some countries as early as 2030. Indonesia may be a lot further off, but it has recently issued new regulations on electric vehicles that will allow them to be sold on the domestic market.

China’s Tsingshan Steel plans a second lithium battery plant at its $2.2 billion Weda Bay Industrial Park processing complex, which Panjaitan now insists will also be the home of PT Freeport Indonesia’s (PTFI) long-delayed second copper smelter.

With Panjaitan indicating the Chinese have agreed to build and operate the plant, it will relieve the government and Phoenix-based minority partner Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX) of the financial burden of running an operation that is estimated to lose $10 billion over the next 20 years.

The technical logic is twofold. Not only will the smelter provide Tsingshan’s Weda Bay processor with the large supplies of sulphuric acid it requires, but it will also serve as a ready source of copper cathode, which can be turned into the wiring and other components needed for the electric car venture.

Although the Gresik smelter has not drawn any ancillary industry apart from a fertilizer plant in the 20 years it has been in operation, Panjaitan is confident that overseas investors, particularly Chinese companies anxious to move offshore, will be attracted to the complex.

Indonesia has 80% of the elements needed for lithium battery production, including cobalt, manganese, aluminum and even rare earth elements. But also on the horizon is a recycling plant at Halmahera that will eventually remove the need for new minerals in the production process.

Trucks operate in the open-pit mine of PT Freeport's Grasberg copper and gold mine complex near Timika, in the eastern region of Papua, Indonesia on September 19, 2015 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Reuters/Muhammad Adimaja/Antara Foto's Grasberg copper and gold mine complex near Timika, in the eastern region of Papua, Indonesia on September 19, 2015 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Reuters/Muhammad Adimaja/Antara Foto
Trucks operate in the open-pit mine of PT Freeport’s Grasberg copper and gold mine complex near Timika, in the eastern region of Papua, Indonesia on September 19, 2015. Image: Antara Photo'

Tsingshan and French partner Eramet, which brings its mining expertise to the partnership, began producing low-grade ferronickel for the world’s stainless steel market earlier this year. Its four production lines are expected to turn out 33,000 tons of ferroalloy a year.

At the $7.8 billion Morawali complex, Tsingshan and Indonesian partner PT Bintang Delepan operate a three million ton a year nickel pig iron smelter, a 500,000-ton carbon steel facility, soon to expand to 3.5 million tons, and a 600,000-ton high-carbon ferrochrome plant.

Further down the coast, in Southeast Sulawesi, China’s Virtue Dragon Nickel Industry last year completed the $1.4 billion first stage of its three-phase Konawe complex, which will eventually have a production capacity of three million tons of ferronickel a year and employ as many as 3,000 local workers.
Panjaitan, who has a testy relationship with the parent company, had always insisted that Freeport build the new $2.8 billion facility near the country’s sole, Mitsubishi-run copper smelter at Gresik on the East Java coast, where $130 million has already been spent on site preparation.

But circumstances have changed. First, it was the government’s acquisition last year of a 51% stake in the Indonesian subsidiary, in exchange for an extension to FCX’s contract until 2041. Now the Covid-19 pandemic has put state finances under pressure and raised questions about spending priorities.

Unlike nickel, copper refining is a notoriously marginal business, particularly when the final process of turning concentrate into copper cathode adds only 5% to the value.

Officials argue that a smelting hub in Halmahera will create cost-saving synergy, both in construction and operation. But doubts remain. “The only fly in the ointment is the economics,” says one mining executive. “It sounds viable, but there is also a danger that it may turn out to be a white elephant.”

Meanwhile, Panjaitan has forged a burgeoning relationship with Australian iron ore magnate Andrew Forrest, who has been a frequent visitor to Jakarta to discuss his possible involvement in major hydro-electric projects on North Kalimantan’s Kayan River and on the Mamberamo River in Papua.

After meeting with President Widodo on September 4, Panjaitan and Forrest signed an initial letter of intent to work on the joint development of what it called “new and renewable energy to support an environmentally friendly industry” without mentioning any specific projects.

Planned as the source of energy for a series of aluminum-manufacturing clusters on the bauxite-rich island, the $17.8 billion, 9,000MW Kayan River venture is currently part of China’s Belt & Road initiative. But Panjaitan says that does not preclude other participants.

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Australian mining magnate Andrew Forrest has taken an interest in Indonesia. Image: Facebook

A renewable energy advocate, Forrest’s most recent visit to Indonesia involved a stopover in Papua New Guinea (PNG), where he signed an agreement to revive the $5 billion, 2,500MW Purari River hydro-electric project, northwest of Port Moresby, which has been stalled for years.

The billionaire’s interest in PNG has aroused speculation that he may be looking at Bougainville’s giant Panguna copper mine, which has been closed since the 1989 civil war. Analysts note that Bougainville is only 3,000 kilometers away from the Weda Bay facility.

Although Bougainville’s status as an autonomous region of PNG remains in question, a team from Forrest’s Fortescue Metals Group inspected the mine last year. Analysts say it would be no surprise that the firm would be interested in a copper asset as it looks to diversify.

Interestingly, that already includes lithium battery production. Fortescue has been exploring for lithium in the vast Pilbara region of West Australia since last year, but the Australian Financial Review reports it has left the door open to buying into an established lithium project.

“I think everyone has realised that this is a once in a generational shift in natural resources that are going to underpin what happens in the electric vehicle market,” Martin Donahue, managing director of lithium company Kidman Resources, told Fairfax Media in a 2017 interview.

Panjaitan says his vision of Indonesia becoming an industrialized nation crystallized when he was trade minister in the short-lived government of Muslim cleric Abdurrahman Wahid in 2000 to 2001. “Now I’ve got the opportunity,” he says, “I’m just carrying on with it.”

It is easy to be impressed by his grasp of the subject matter and the enthusiasm he brings to the job. “I’m just the one who says yes and no,” he explains. But after sitting in on one of the seven or eight Zoom meetings he has each day, it is clear he knows the right questions to ask.

Panjaitan focused on a business career during the presidencies of Megawati Sukarnoputri and Yudhoyono. In 2004, he founded his own company, PT Toba Sejahtra, with interests in oil and gas, coal, electricity generation and agriculture, mostly in Kalimantan and Sumatra.

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A Nickel mine in Indonesia. Image: AFP

It was as the owner of a Kalimantan timber concession — and his daughter’s insistence that he refrain from wastefully using the wood for pulp and paper — that bought him into contact with Widodo, then a little known Solo, Central Java furniture maker.

Over the last six years, he has become the president’s most trusted adviser. Initially, it was on political issues, but since becoming minister of the revamped Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Investment in 2016, he has become increasingly involved in natural resources policy.

Asked about persistent claims that he is using his powerful position to win benefits for himself, Panjaitan takes the question in his stride: “At my age and as a retired general, I have everything,” he says. “Enough is enough. I don’t dream of having more than what I have now. In Indonesia today, you can’t hide anything.”

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Interesting insight on how we are trying to balance China influence in our infrastructure projects with Australian magnates.


Not only that, but we gracefully enough made other magnates in mining industry like Freeport mc Moran and Newmont co to divest and taking acquisition process of their assets here. The issue with Chinese smelter companies here is they tend to cheat the import process for steel or other metal products by bring their own products, put SNI stamp and sold them out in Indonesia along with their own processed product Made in Indonesia. This practices is a major concern right now
 
Not only that, but we gracefully enough made other magnates in mining industry like Freeport mc Moran and Newmont co to divest and taking acquisition process of their assets here. The issue with Chinese smelter companies here is they tend to cheat the import process for steel or other metal products by bring their own products, put SNI stamp and sold them out in Indonesia along with their own processed product Made in Indonesia. This practices is a major concern right now

Any idea how we're going to prevent this smuggling?

Overall I have the feeling that Indonesia has soured on Chinese investment. Not only is it a pain in the *** domestically, they tend to have major delays in delivery as well. One of the reasons why we're trying to bring in the Australians (Though note its an independent magnate unaffiliated with the Aussie gov, since the Aussie gov tends to be a pain in the neck as well)
 
Any idea how we're going to prevent this smuggling?

Overall I have the feeling that Indonesia has soured on Chinese investment. Not only is it a pain in the *** domestically, they tend to have major delays in delivery as well. One of the reasons why we're trying to bring in the Australians (Though note its an independent magnate unaffiliated with the Aussie gov, since the Aussie gov tends to be a pain in the neck as well)

regular crackdown like inspection is needed at their production facilities, especially one in outside Java, Sumatra and Kalimantan area. The other thing is to take more measure and regular inspection for the import of raw materials and half processed goods bound to the industrial facility. I don't think we can be picky as current global economic situation is not that good, it just we need to be more tact and doing utmost to increasing our surveillance over their investment and put more preventive measure.
 
Indonesia 2021 infrastructure budget increase 47,3%.

Target output strategic 2021 :
1. Low cost housing : 11,650 unit
2. Access to sanitation and solid waste/integrated waste facility : 1,037,010 household
3. Dam : 43 unit on going & 4 unit new dam.
4. Irigation network : 20,000 acres
5. Road : 678Km
6. Bridge : 13,1Km
7. Railway : 378Km
8. Airport : 10 Unit
9. Household gas network : 120,776SR
10. Conversion of oil fuels to Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) for fishermen : 25.000 unit.
11. Telecom tower for remote area : 5,053 location


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Indonesia adds Twitter, Zoom to tech companies that must pay 10% VAT

News Desk
Reuters

Jakarta, Indonesia / Wed, September 9, 2020 / 08:20 am

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Indonesia on Tuesday added 12 more companies, including social media firm Twitter and video-conferencing site Zoom, to a list of internet-based businesses that must pay a 10% value-added tax on sales.

In July Indonesia had already announced that Alphabet Inc's Google Asia Pacific, Netflix and Facebook among other tech companies would be liable to VAT. Governments globally are seeking to ensure that internet-based tech giants are paying their fair share of taxes.

Indonesia's moves come amid a shift to more online business with increased remote working during the coronavirus and as the pandemic has hit government finances. Among companies named on Tuesday were business networking site LinkedIn Singapore, two units of Twitter, Skype Communications, Zoom Video Communications, antivirus provider McAfee Ireland, and Microsoft Ireland Operations .

The Indonesian tax office also put game developer Mojang AB, streaming platforms Novi Digital Entertainment and PCCW Vuclip (Singapore) on the list, as well as digital marketplaces Jingdong Indonesia Pertama and Shopee International Indonesia. The companies must start charging VAT to advertisers and other customers from Oct. 1.

The companies were not immediately available to comment. Under rules introduced earlier this year, non-resident foreign firms that generate annual sales of at least 600 million rupiah ($40,650) for digital products and services in Indonesia from at least 12,000 users are required to pay the VAT.

Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country with a population of nearly 270 million, is experiencing a boom in its digital economy which is expected to reach $130 billion by 2025, a study by Google, Temasek Holdings and Bain & Company predicts.

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Indonesia's e-commerce sales to surpass India's
source

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Management consulting company Redseer projected Indonesia’s online retail gross merchandise value (GMV), which indicates overall sales value, to surpass India’s this year, driven by a new cohort of e-commerce users amid the pandemic. Redseer Southeast Asia partner Roshan Raj Behera said Indonesia’s 2020 e-commerce GMV will reach US$40 billion this year, the third-highest in the world and higher than India’s predicted $38 billion. Last year, India’s GMV was higher at $29.2 billion, ranking third, compared to Indonesia’s $23 billion, which followed suit.
 
Indonesia's e-commerce sales to surpass India's
source

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Wonder what's wrong with India? You'd think that due to their longer and harsher lockdown they'll have an even more booming growth in e-commerce than us.
 
And don't forget their larger population.
Exactly...

Maybe because the lockdown was so harsh not even logistics could still function? If so, thats just heartless.

Read from the New York Times that thousands of Indian farmers are committing suicide, especially in Punjab. While they has been growth in the agriculture sector, a lot of farmers are struggling since they can't get farmhands (Penggarap Sewa) to work the fields, and can't get their produce/harvest to the markets.
 
Exactly...

Maybe because the lockdown was so harsh not even logistics could still function? If so, thats just heartless.

Read from the New York Times that thousands of Indian farmers are committing suicide, especially in Punjab. While they has been growth in the agriculture sector, a lot of farmers are struggling since they can't get farmhands (Penggarap Sewa) to work the fields, and can't get their produce/harvest to the markets.

India should really find way to integrate its economy with greater East Asia at people to people level to allow for exports. China does that with Alibaba and Wish where you could basically find all stuff directly from local producer/distributor. Indonesia is moving in the same direction with Tokopedia.
 
Indonesia’s Electric Vehicle Ambition Angers Japan: Minister

Jakarta. Indonesia is taking a huge leap into electric vehicle industry and has appealed for technological support from China and South Korea in an ambitious industrial program that apparently makes Japan unhappy, the chief investment minister has said.

The EV technology is much simpler than combustion engines because it only needs battery and motor, which Indonesia can develop by its own, according to Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, the coordinating minister for maritime affairs and investment.

“I’m one of the strongest supporters for the EV industry. Why? Because 96 percent of cars we are using now are made by Japan,” Luhut said in a recent webinar arranged the North Sumatran alumni of the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB). The webinar on Friday was uploaded to the alumni’s YouTube account.

“Pardon me, but to be honest we are now under Japan’s ‘technology colonialism’,” Luhut said.

Indonesia is ready to build the EV industry because it has the key material for the making of lithium battery and is approaching China and South Korea to develop the technology, Luhut said.

“Japan is angry with us. They asked why we didn’t consider developing hybrid cars first. And I was accused of being pro-China,” the retired army general said.

“Why should we go hybrid while we can directly develop electric vehicles?” he added.

Lithium Battery

Indonesia has the potential to become key player in the global lithium battery industry and shouldn’t end up as merely a market for electric vehicles, the minister said.

“The key is lithium battery and we have the world’s largest nickel ore reserves. Several years ago, we began to develop the downstream industry [for nickel] but we couldn’t do that alone. We didn’t have the full technological application so we engaged with China,” Luhut said.

“We are now able to produce iron steel and carbon steel and by 2024 we will have the capability to build lithium battery because we can extract cobalt from low-grade nickel ore,” Luhut said.

“We are now able to produce iron steel and carbon steel and by 2024 we will have the capability to build lithium battery because we can extract cobalt from low-grade nickel ore,” Luhut said.

“In Weda Bay industrial park, Central Halmahera [North Maluku], we are processing copper from Freeport mines to extract sulfuric acid, which will then go to Morowali [Central Sulawesi] or Karawang [West Java] -- where there will be a Hyundai electric car assembly plant and LG -- to produce lithium battery,” he said.

Luhut said Indonesia can become a key player in the global electric vehicle industry because all it needs is just “battery and motor”.

“We will become the second or third largest lithium battery producer in the world in 2027. Indonesia will become part of the global supply chain,” Luhut said.

Added Value

The government is making tremendous efforts to lift domestic industry to a new level, by sending young talents to foreign countries to learn, for instance, how to extract cobalt from nickel ore, Luhut said.

“Many don’t realize that during this challenging situation due to Covid-19, we enjoyed a surplus in international trade because of the iron steel export, which valued at $10 billion. Next year, the export value is targeted at $13 billion to 15 billion, and up to $35 billion by 2024,” he said.

“The current account deficit should no longer be an issue by 2024.”

Apart from nickel, Indonesia is also developing the downstream industry for bauxite in Bintan Island to begin production by January next year, he said.

Momentum

Satryo Soemantri Brodjonegoro, an advisor for Luhut, said Indonesia is gaining momentum in the EV industry and that President Joko Widodo has signed a decree on the acceleration of EV development.

“We shouldn’t let go of this momentum. EV technology is much simpler compared to combustion engine. In EV, it only needs battery, electric motor and computer,” Satryo said in the webinar.

“We must share a common vision here, that we will start producing EVs, otherwise we will be lagging behind other countries such as Vietnam.”

Satryo said there is no way the country can start the EV industry from scratch and South Korea’s Hyundai could likely become a partner as it plans to set up an assembly plant for electric vehicles in West Java.

“Hyundai will build a plant in Purwakarta. They can do that but there must be a scenario … that maybe within five years the entire components are built in Indonesia, including batteries,” he said.

“We cannot start from scratch, but we cannot let ourselves become merely an assembly plant or market either.”

 
Indonesia’s Electric Vehicle Ambition Angers Japan: Minister

Jakarta. Indonesia is taking a huge leap into electric vehicle industry and has appealed for technological support from China and South Korea in an ambitious industrial program that apparently makes Japan unhappy, the chief investment minister has said.

The EV technology is much simpler than combustion engines because it only needs battery and motor, which Indonesia can develop by its own, according to Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, the coordinating minister for maritime affairs and investment.

“I’m one of the strongest supporters for the EV industry. Why? Because 96 percent of cars we are using now are made by Japan,” Luhut said in a recent webinar arranged the North Sumatran alumni of the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB). The webinar on Friday was uploaded to the alumni’s YouTube account.

“Pardon me, but to be honest we are now under Japan’s ‘technology colonialism’,” Luhut said.

Indonesia is ready to build the EV industry because it has the key material for the making of lithium battery and is approaching China and South Korea to develop the technology, Luhut said.

“Japan is angry with us. They asked why we didn’t consider developing hybrid cars first. And I was accused of being pro-China,” the retired army general said.

“Why should we go hybrid while we can directly develop electric vehicles?” he added.

Lithium Battery

Indonesia has the potential to become key player in the global lithium battery industry and shouldn’t end up as merely a market for electric vehicles, the minister said.

“The key is lithium battery and we have the world’s largest nickel ore reserves. Several years ago, we began to develop the downstream industry [for nickel] but we couldn’t do that alone. We didn’t have the full technological application so we engaged with China,” Luhut said.

“We are now able to produce iron steel and carbon steel and by 2024 we will have the capability to build lithium battery because we can extract cobalt from low-grade nickel ore,” Luhut said.

“We are now able to produce iron steel and carbon steel and by 2024 we will have the capability to build lithium battery because we can extract cobalt from low-grade nickel ore,” Luhut said.

“In Weda Bay industrial park, Central Halmahera [North Maluku], we are processing copper from Freeport mines to extract sulfuric acid, which will then go to Morowali [Central Sulawesi] or Karawang [West Java] -- where there will be a Hyundai electric car assembly plant and LG -- to produce lithium battery,” he said.

Luhut said Indonesia can become a key player in the global electric vehicle industry because all it needs is just “battery and motor”.

“We will become the second or third largest lithium battery producer in the world in 2027. Indonesia will become part of the global supply chain,” Luhut said.

Added Value

The government is making tremendous efforts to lift domestic industry to a new level, by sending young talents to foreign countries to learn, for instance, how to extract cobalt from nickel ore, Luhut said.

“Many don’t realize that during this challenging situation due to Covid-19, we enjoyed a surplus in international trade because of the iron steel export, which valued at $10 billion. Next year, the export value is targeted at $13 billion to 15 billion, and up to $35 billion by 2024,” he said.

“The current account deficit should no longer be an issue by 2024.”

Apart from nickel, Indonesia is also developing the downstream industry for bauxite in Bintan Island to begin production by January next year, he said.

Momentum

Satryo Soemantri Brodjonegoro, an advisor for Luhut, said Indonesia is gaining momentum in the EV industry and that President Joko Widodo has signed a decree on the acceleration of EV development.

“We shouldn’t let go of this momentum. EV technology is much simpler compared to combustion engine. In EV, it only needs battery, electric motor and computer,” Satryo said in the webinar.

“We must share a common vision here, that we will start producing EVs, otherwise we will be lagging behind other countries such as Vietnam.”

Satryo said there is no way the country can start the EV industry from scratch and South Korea’s Hyundai could likely become a partner as it plans to set up an assembly plant for electric vehicles in West Java.

“Hyundai will build a plant in Purwakarta. They can do that but there must be a scenario … that maybe within five years the entire components are built in Indonesia, including batteries,” he said.

“We cannot start from scratch, but we cannot let ourselves become merely an assembly plant or market either.”



Don't know why we got so many troublesome patriot, Prabowo, Luhut, Kivlan Zein, and so on. Remind me of General Sheppard character in Call of Duty
 
Race is on for Indonesia’s untapped rare earths

JAKARTA – Rare earth, the experts like to say, is neither rare nor is it earth. But given its use in everything from smartphones to high-tech aerospace and defense systems, a potential buried treasure from the past may soon become the next big thing in Indonesian mining.

Indonesia appears to have only modest proven amounts of the v valuable minerals, but much of what it does have is locked away in the rock waste, or tailings, left over from centuries of tin mining on the islands of Bangka and Belitung, south of Singapore.

Although preliminary studies show state-owned PT Tambang Timah’s tin sands contain 13 of the 17 chemical elements in the periodic table present in rare earths, it will take further investigation to determine whether it is present in commercial quantities.

If it is, that would make Indonesia a player in an industry that is fast becoming a new trade war flashpoint between the United States and China because of its strategic significance for numerous civilian and military technologies, including both laser and precision-guided missiles.

China currently controls 80% of the world’s trade in rare earths and could conceivably block US access in retaliation for any future Washington sanctions on Chinese-made goods.

With proven reserves of 327,500 tons, Timah still produces about 30,000 tons of tin a year from an offshore-onshore concession covering 512,369 hectares; other private firms add 40,000 tons, making Indonesia the world’s largest tin producer.

Rare earths also occur in Aceh, Jambi and Riau’s Singkep Island and in West Kalimantan, where they are associated with rich deposits of bauxite, the feedstock for a US$695 million alumina smelter the Chinese are building north of Pontianak, the province capital.

Historically, most rare earths have been produced as by-products from tin, copper and gold mining, but were not considered worth processing and have invariably ended up in stockpiles, as is the case with Tambang Timah.

With the US distracted by internal problems, the only outside interest so far in Indonesia’s potential has inevitably come from China, which has 55 million tonnes of rare earth reserves, by far the largest in the world.

But in looking for investors elsewhere, such as the US and Australia, the government is anxious to develop domestic expertise in the complex seven-stage process of refining monazite and xenotime, the two minerals that house REE elements.

Where the US may have an edge over China is in handling radioactive thorium, which is released in the course of the processing and must be treated with extreme care, even if it doesn’t produce uranium’s dangerous gamma rays.

Laboratory results indicate Timah’s tailings contain significant quantities of neodymium and praseodymium, which in combination with iron and boron are used to produce high-power magnets for electric motors and military guidance and control systems.

Indonesia already possesses 80% of the minerals, rare earths included, needed to manufacture lithium batteries, part of the government’s policy of venturing into electric vehicles as a way of creating a future industrial base built around its vast natural resources.

Neodymium is responsible for most rare earth demand, with a market value of $11.3 billion in 2017. Demand is currently outstripping supply by about 2-3,000 tons a year, but that gap will widen as more lithium battery-powered electric vehicles appear on the world’s roads.

Future prospects depend on the government enacting policy and regulation and in initiating incentives for downstream and upstream industry, according to Fadli Rahman, co-author of a 2014 Colorado School of Mines paper on Indonesia’s rare earth potential.

“If the Indonesian government remains passive and unassertive to the viable options, the rare earths will merely remain rare to Indonesians for the foreseeable future,” said Rahman, now state oil company Pertamina’s youngest commissioner.

With estimated reserves of only 13 million tons, the US is waking up to the fact that China’s domination of the increasingly strategic material leaves it vulnerable.

At one point, neodymium was even on the Donald Trump administration’s list of tariffs it placed on Chinese imports in 2018 before it was quietly removed, an indication of how important it has become to the US economy.

Last year, China threatened to strengthen controls on rare earth exports to the US, one of the reasons why Washington recently formalized an existing partnership with Australia to develop new sources of critical minerals, including rare earth, cobalt and tungsten.

Australia, with 2.1 million tons, is one of a handful of countries possessing significant rare earth reserves. Others include Brazil (22 million tons), Russia (19 million), Vietnam (11 million) and India (3.1 million).

Vietnam, whose rare earth concentrations are along its northwestern border with China and the South China Sea coast, is reportedly keen on using two relatively common elements, cerium and lanthanum, to develop a clean energy capacity.

The US began mining rare earth at southern California’s Mountain Pass mine in the 1960s, but since 2010 China has become the dominant player, producing 100,000 tons a year compared with the US output of 43,000 tons over the past two decades.

An open-pit mine close to the Nevada border known as Mountain Pass was recently saved from a second bankruptcy by MP Materials, a company owned by a Chicago hedge fund. It remains the only rare earth mining and processing facility in the US.

Most rare earth projects have proven to be uneconomic because of mining costs which can contribute 25-39% of the total expenditure for extracting from hard rock deposits. But Bangka-Belitung’s Monazite has the advantage of being in sand form and therefore does not require crushing and grinding.

In the end, thorium and how to deal with it remains a major impediment to the development of monazite deposits.

Indonesian nuclear advocate Bob Effendi, the local representative for American nuclear reactor design company ThorCon, asserts that safety concerns around the stockpiling of the radioactive waste is a “non-issue.”

But local geologists say it will need to be contained in stainless steel casks and stored in reinforced concrete buildings, possibly on a small uninhabited island, until such time as it is needed as fuel for a long-planned nuclear power station.

For decades now, part of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) mission has been to simply monitor the volume of monazite in Tambang Timah’s tailings, as it has done with similar mine waste around the world.

In the meantime, nuclear power remains on Indonesia’s agenda, initially set down in a 2007 long-term national development planning law that envisaged an operating plant by 2024.

In 2014, the Ministry of Mines and Energy regulation listed nuclear in the same category as other sources of renewable energy, but with the proviso that it should only be considered as a final option.

A second ministerial regulation in 2019 called for the drawing up of a concrete plan for the construction of a nuclear power station, followed by a presidential regulation earlier this year which listed it as a priority program for advanced studies.

Bangka-Belitung governor Erzaldi Rosman Djohan sent a letter to the Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Resources and Investment on August 3 supporting the construction of the nuclear plant in the southern Sumatran province.

But the Indonesian citizenry may first have to get over their innate fear of nuclear power, which has so far stymied plans going back to the New Order era for a station to be built on the Muria Peninsula in heavily-populated Central Java.

A member of President Joko Widodo’s National Economic and Industry Committee (KEIN), Effendi argues that a thorium-fuelled plant is not only immune to meltdown but is cheaper to build and produces less waste.

The former oilman also challenges the widely-held perception that Indonesia has limitless sources of energy, noting that coal and gas reserves are not finite and claiming that solar and wind potential is only 15% of what it is claimed to be.

Indonesians are not alone in their fear of anything nuclear-related. In Malaysia, the government faces public opposition to the Lynas Corporation’s facility near Kuantan, which processes rare earth oxides shipped from its Mt Weld concentration plant in West Australia.

With more low-level radioactive waste piling up at the plant, and the issue heading for Malaysia’s High Court, Lynas has now been forced to move the cracking and leeching part of the process to the outback mining center of Kalgoorlie-Boulder.

 
State spending in draft 2021 state budget increases Rp2.5 trillion

4 hours ago



Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. ANTARA/twitter @KemenkeuRI/pri. (ANTARA/twitter @KemenkeuRI)


As we see it now, energy subsidy increased by Rp2.4 trillion and revenue sharing fund fell by Rp0.8 trillion
Jakarta (ANTARA) - The government raised the targeted state spending for 2021 by Rp2.5 trillion to Rp2,750 trillion, from the government-outlined target of Rp2,747.5 trillion in the draft 2021 state budget, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati stated.

"As we see it now, energy subsidy increased by Rp2.4 trillion and revenue sharing fund fell by Rp0.8 trillion," Indrawati noted during a working meeting with the House of Representatives' budget committee here on Friday.

The spending hike arose from additional energy subsidy for three-kilogram liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) canisters, totaling Rp2.4 trillion, and a decline in revenue-sharing fund worth Rp0.8 trillion as a result of a change in state revenues, she remarked.

"This is due to the additional volume of seven million to 7.5 million metric tons," he expounded.

The minister remarked that the central government's spending rose Rp3.3 trillion to Rp1,954.5 trillion, from Rp1,951.3 trillion earlier in the draft 2021 state budget.

The central government's spending comprises spending of ministries and institutions reaching Rp1,029.9 trillion and non-ministerial government institutions' spending amounting to Rp924.7 trillion.

The non-ministerial government institutions' spending represents a Rp3.3-trillion increase, from Rp921.4 trillion earlier.

The amount of funds transferred to regions and village funds (TKDD) fell Rp0.8 trillion to Rp795.5 trillion, from Rp796.3 trillion earlier in the draft 2021 state budget.

The shortfall results from a decline in the amount of funds transferred to regions, from Rp724.3 trillion to Rp723.5 trillion, while the amount of village funds remains unchanged at Rp72 trillion.

Related news: Government slashes 2021 state revenue target by Rp32.7 trillion
Related news: Village funding in 2021 Draft State Budget reaches Rp72 trillion
Related news: 2021 draft budget falls short on lifting purchasing power: Indef



Reporter: Astrid Faidlatul H/Suharto
Editor: Sri Haryati
COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2020

 
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