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Taiwanese CPC, Pertamina sign deal for $8b petrochemical plant
  • Norman Harsono
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Mon, June 8, 2020 / 02:21 pm

2020_06_05_97033_1591363411._large.jpg

A Pertamina refinery is pictured. Pertamina signed on Friday a head of agreement with Taiwanese counterpart CPC to develop a petrochemical facility in Balongan, West Java. (Pertamina/Pertamina)

State-owned oil and gas giant Pertamina signed on Friday a head of agreement with Taiwanese counterpart CPC to develop a petrochemical facility in Balongan, West Java.

The US$8 billion petrochemical facility, slated for commercial operation in 2026, represents the third phase expansion of Pertamina’s Balongan oil refinery.

“This project is an important step in strengthening Pertamina’s petrochemical business such that, in the next 10 years, Pertamina can become a major petrochemical business player in the Asia- Pacific,” said Pertamina president director Nicke Widyawati in a statement that day.

The statement added that Pertamina and CPC had been in talks over the project since late 2018. The two companies completed a feasibility study the following year.

Read also: Pertamina picks Siemens to supply machinery for Balikpapan refinery

Once expansion of the Balongan refinery is completed in 2022, the facility’s fuel output capacity is expected to rise by 20 percent to 150,000 barrels per day (bpd), excluding petrochemical production, in meeting Indonesia’s growing demand for transportation fuels. Pertamina is working to develop six other refineries for similar reasons.

Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) head Bahlil Lahadali, who witnessed Friday’s signing, said his office had confirmed tax holiday incentives for the project in supporting the development.

“This is a government priority project. We will absolutely support it,” he said.

Pertamina previously said it planned for its Balongan facility to produce 1 million tons of ethylene each year. Ethylene, like most petrochemicals, is mainly used to produce plastics, allowing Pertamina to diversify revenue streams during periods of low fuel demand such as is happening amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Consumption plunged 35 percent to 65,678 kiloliters per day in April from the daily average in January and February — before the country introduced a physical distancing policy requiring people to stay at home to contain the COVID-19 outbreak.

Read also: Oil giant Pertamina delves into health industry amid drop in fuel demand

Due to the falling demand, Pertamina projects its revenue to fall by up to 45 percent below initial expectations under a worst-case scenario.

Pertamina spokeswoman Fajriyah Usman told The Jakarta Post on May 18 that the oil company would prepare the base ingredients for pharmaceutical production, then either state-owned pharmaceutical company Kimia Farma or Kimia Farma with Pertamina would process the ingredients into pharmaceuticals.

“We are still discussing the details,” Ganti Winarno, corporate secretary at Kimia Farma, told the Post Wednesday last week.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...ina-sign-deal-for-8b-petrochemical-plant.html
I wonder, would this piss off china? Or are they cool so long as we don't politically acknowldege them?
 
I wonder, would this piss off china? Or are they cool so long as we don't politically acknowldege them?

Actually there is lot of Taiwan company investing in mainland China, the list is so long.
 
I wonder, would this piss off china? Or are they cool so long as we don't politically acknowldege them?

Yup, it will be Okay if the relation is only about business, there are many Taiwan companies as well who operates in Indonesia.
 
MRT Jakarta is open while tight procedure is implemented during easing of lock down.

 
Indonesian government appointed female spoke person for Covid 19 task force. I think it will be a good addition since we only have one spoke person for the task previously who is Ahmad Heriyanto. Ahmad Heriyanto never got a single holiday since the task force is created in early March. The new additional spoke person is Dr Reisa Broto Asmoro.

 
I wonder, would this piss off china? Or are they cool so long as we don't politically acknowldege them?

Well, PRC always see Taiwan's claim on South China Sea as their own claim. Because those 9 Dash Line bullshit come from ROC claim. PRC was only inherited that claim. So they never disturb Taiwanese venture on South China Sea. Just like Diaoyu / Senkaku claim etc are also come from ROC Taiwan claim first (when they still rule over Mainland China).

But who know what happen in near future, as China and Taiwan relation become worsened lately.
 
Matthew H Tong

12 May 2020 11:03 am
Indonesia may offer lowest EV battery-making cost yet


It appears that Indonesia’s efforts to turn itself into an EV battery production hub may be supported by the fact that it could offer the lowest manufacturing costs in the whole of Asia. According to a BloombergNEF report, Indonesia’s industrial electricity prices are about 11% lower than China.

In fact, the country is teeming with nickel, cobalt and manganese depositories, which are key raw minerals in EV batteries. This, coupled with low labour and electricity costs, as well as government subsidies, can reduce the total battery manufacturing cost by 8% compared to those made in China, the report adds.

However, one downside to Indonesia’s low electricity price is its grid carbon intensity, which is among the highest in the region at 711 grammes of CO2 per kWh. This may cause manufacturers who are looking for low carbon energy sources to look elsewhere, but Indonesia said it plans to develop new hydro and geothermal powerplants that it says will supply the industry with cheap, low-carbon electricity.

Meanwhile, Indonesia has also announced plans to relocate its capital city from Jakarta to East Kalimantan, and that the city will only use autonomous and electric vehicles for mass transportation. East Kalimantan is a province on the island of Borneo, one which it shares with Malaysia and Brunei.



To further promote EV uptake, there will also be lithium battery-production facilities in the new capital city, with plans to build a hydroelectric powerplant as a low-carbon energy source. Once again, the move isn’t without controversy – the planned city requires massive deforestation, and doing so will further raise Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Borneo’s forests consist largely of peatland, a type of wetland that holds about 12 times more carbon than other tropical rainforests. Just one hectare of peatland can release around 6,000 metric tonnes of CO2 when cleared. Many parts of Borneo’s peatland forest have been cleared via burning for palm oil plantations, which has released over 140 million metric tonnes of C02, an amount that’s equal to the annual emissions of 28 million cars.

Indonesia has promised to not clear any protected forests in Borneo, but the peatlands will have to be drained to support the construction buildings and highways, which could make the turf drier and more vulnerable to fires.
 
Government to develop 165,000 hectares land in Central Kalimantan for food-estate program
  • Mardika Parama
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Thu, June 11, 2020 / 08:32 am
2020_04_01_91501_1585737478._large.jpg

Farmers harvest rice using a new machine in Sleman, Yogyakarta on April 1. President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has instructed the Public Works and Housing Ministry to expand the government’s food-estate program by developing 165,000 hectares of land in Pulang Pisau regency, Central Kalimantan, into farmland. (JP/Tarko Sudiarno)

President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has instructed the Public Works and Housing Ministry to expand the government’s food-estate program by developing 165,000 hectares of land in Pulang Pisau regency, Central Kalimantan, into farmland, a senior official has said.

Minister Basuki Hadimulyono said a total of 85,500 ha of land in the area already functioned as farmland so the ministry only needed to clear 79,500 ha of scrubland for the development. The project aims to boost productivity by 2 tons of rice for each ha of land.

“We will start developing the land this year until 2022. This project is our second-highest priority after the development of the National Strategic Tourist Areas [KSPN],” he said during an online video conference on Tuesday.


He further said the land designated for the project was alluvial and not peatland, even though it was previously used in the government’s Peatland Development Project (PLG).

The ministry will require Rp1.05 trillion (US$74.5 million) to build the project’s irrigation system, according to Basuki, and the development project will be carried out in conjunction with the State-Owned Enterprise Ministry through an investment scheme.

“We will handle the irrigation system rehabilitation program on this former PLG land,” he said.

Government data presented by President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo on April 28 showed that over 20 provinces faced shortages of staple foods, such as garlic, sugar, chilis and eggs, making food security one of his administration’s priorities.

However, Agrarian Reform Consortium (KPA) secretary-general Dewi Kartika said the government’s botched agrarian reform program was to blame for the shortages as vast plots of farmland were constantly being encroached on by mining concessions and corporate plantations.

Agrarian reform was among the National Priority Programs pushed by Jokowi’s first-term administration in an effort to better distribute development and improve the quality of people’s lives.

It includes programs that are expected to alleviate poverty in villages, improve the country’s food security and land production, acknowledge ownership rights over land owned by individuals, the state and the general public, including land utilization in the popular interest.

“According to National Land Agency data, our farmland shrank by 650,000 ha in 2018. Much of this was converted to be used by other business sectors such as palm oil, natural resources extraction and infrastructure,” Dwi said in May.

She added that she feared the government’s plan to clear 600,000 ha of peatland in Central Kalimantan would yield the same result as a similar measure taken under former president Soeharto, which ended up leading to crop failures and subsequent food shortages.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...ntral-kalimantan-for-food-estate-program.html

@Viva_Viet :cheers:
 
Pertamina loses partners, eyes new investors for refinery megaprojects
  • Norman Harsono
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, June 9, 2020 / 07:04 pm

2019_07_30_77233_1564476004._large.jpg

Through the Refinery Development Master Plan (RDMP) project, state-owned oil and gas holding company Pertamina will increase the capacity of its Balikpapan refinery by around 38 percent. (Courtesy of Pertamina/.)


State-owned oil giant Pertamina is scouting for new partners to develop multibillion dollar oil refineries in Indonesia after its previous partners, from Saudi Aramco to Oman’s Overseas Oil and Gas LLC (OOG), pulled out.

Pertamina recently signed deals with Taiwanese petrochemical giant CPC and a South Korean consortium to develop the Balongan and Tuban refineries respectively. It is eyeing other companies from various countries for other refineries, according to company spokesperson Fajriyah Usman.

The refineries, once completed, are expected to double Indonesia’s fuel output, enabling Pertamina to meet the country’s growing transportation fuel demand without raising fuel imports, a major contributor to the nation’s trade deficit.


“None of these refineries have been removed [from the National Strategic Projects] and all of them are on track,” Fajriyah said on June 5. Projects listed under the National Strategic Projects are eligible for government aid, providing an incentive for investment.

Indonesia has set a goal to process more resources domestically to boost export revenue and narrow the nation’s current account deficit, which continues to weigh down the economy. Fajriyah and Pertamina megaprojects and petrochemical director Ignatius “Lete” Tallulembang, the man who oversees the refinery projects, shared updates from the national strategic projects.

Cilacap refinery

The five-year partnership between Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, Aramco, and Pertamina officially ended, allowing the latter to move forward in expanding its refinery in Cilacap, Central Java.

Lete said on June 5 that Aramco sent the partnership cancellation letter on April 21. The two companies had disagreed over the refinery’s value.

Thus, Pertamina sent on May 22 an offer to United Arab Emirates oil company Adnoc to replace Aramco in developing Cilacap. While waiting for a response, Pertamina plans to focus on developing the biofuel refinery facility within the Cilacap compound.

“The land is settled. We will look for opportunities to build what we can while waiting for a new partner,” he said.

Aramco declined to comment. Adnoc did not respond to queries from The Jakarta Post.

Bontang refinery

Development of the Bontang refinery in East Kalimantan has been put on hold while Pertamina looks for a new partner after its partnership agreement expired in December last year with Omani energy firm OOG. The project faced land acquisition issues.

“We will put in on hold. We will study the supply and demand again. Once that’s clear, we will talk to stakeholders,” said Lete.

Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Pandjaitan said in December last year his office was looking at UAE oil companies Mubadala and Adnoc to replace OOG in developing Bontang.

Read also: Pertamina mulls relocating multibillion-dollar project to Sumatra over land issue

Balikpapan refinery

The Balikpapan refinery, which is the only project to have begun construction, reached 17 percent completion as of May 24, with pipes and valves on site, according to Pertamina.

Lete said the project, located in East Kalimantan with 5,300 workers under employment, would continue despite supply chain problems due to lockdowns around the world as countries work to contain COVID-19.

“Based on the current progress, the expected completion date is still as initially planned; mid-2023,” he said.

Balongan refinery

The first phase of the three-phase Balongan refinery expansion project in West Java would be completed in 2022, the earliest among all refinery projects, said Lete.

Pertamina signed on June 5 a deal with its Taiwanese counterpart CPC to develop the third phase of the Balongan facility, which is an $8 billion petrochemical plant slated for operation in 2026.

Pertamina president director Nicke Widyawati said Friday the project could help Pertamina become “a major petrochemical business player in the Asia-Pacific” over the next 10 years.

The facility is expected to produce 1 million tons of ethylene each year. Ethylene, like most petrochemicals, is predominantly used to make plastic products.

CPC vice president JZ Fang said the project’s total value was NT$250 billion (US$8.36 billion), as reported by Taiwanese media outlets.

He also said CPC and Pertamina would hold a 45 percent stake each with the remaining 10 percent reserved for potential investors.

Tuban refinery

Pertamina has continued to struggle with land-related issues over a refinery in Tuban, East Java.

The oil company secured all 328 hectares of land owned by the Environment and Forestry Ministry as of May 11 and completed 86 percent of its coastline restoration program as of May 23.

Lete said Pertamina had also purchased 37 percent of 384 ha of privately owned land in the project site with plans to purchase the remaining 63 percent by the third quarter.

“The engineering design goes on but was slightly affected by the [social restrictions], resulting in a slight slowdown in progress,” he said.

Dumai refinery

Pertamina signed on May 22 a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Indonesian state construction firm PT Nindya Karya and a South Korean consortium to look into a $1.5 billion refinery expansion in Dumai, Riau.

“This is still a very early stage deal. It’s a non-binding MoU,” Lete said on Friday.

Read also: Pertamina, South Korean consortium to develop Dumai refinery

He said Pertamina was also in talks with United States energy firm ConocoPhillips to produce a methanol gas processing facility in Dumai.

Plaju refinery

The Plaju refinery, which is set to specialize in producing palm oil-based biofuels, is at its basic engineering design phase.

Pertamina also plans to experiment producing bioavtur (aviation fuel), biogasoline and biodiesel in the Plaju refinery, located in South Sumatra, this year.

“We will conduct efficiency and modernization measures but we will focus first on developing the biorefinery,” said Lete.

Pertamina and Italian oil company Eni recently ended their partnership to develop the Plaju refinery. The two companies faced complications related to the European Union’s palm oil standards, which are more stringent than Indonesia’s standards due to deforestation concerns.

 
Government to develop 165,000 hectares land in Central Kalimantan for food-estate program
  • Mardika Parama
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Thu, June 11, 2020 / 08:32 am
2020_04_01_91501_1585737478._large.jpg

Farmers harvest rice using a new machine in Sleman, Yogyakarta on April 1. President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has instructed the Public Works and Housing Ministry to expand the government’s food-estate program by developing 165,000 hectares of land in Pulang Pisau regency, Central Kalimantan, into farmland. (JP/Tarko Sudiarno)

President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has instructed the Public Works and Housing Ministry to expand the government’s food-estate program by developing 165,000 hectares of land in Pulang Pisau regency, Central Kalimantan, into farmland, a senior official has said.

Minister Basuki Hadimulyono said a total of 85,500 ha of land in the area already functioned as farmland so the ministry only needed to clear 79,500 ha of scrubland for the development. The project aims to boost productivity by 2 tons of rice for each ha of land.

“We will start developing the land this year until 2022. This project is our second-highest priority after the development of the National Strategic Tourist Areas [KSPN],” he said during an online video conference on Tuesday.


He further said the land designated for the project was alluvial and not peatland, even though it was previously used in the government’s Peatland Development Project (PLG).

The ministry will require Rp1.05 trillion (US$74.5 million) to build the project’s irrigation system, according to Basuki, and the development project will be carried out in conjunction with the State-Owned Enterprise Ministry through an investment scheme.

“We will handle the irrigation system rehabilitation program on this former PLG land,” he said.

Government data presented by President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo on April 28 showed that over 20 provinces faced shortages of staple foods, such as garlic, sugar, chilis and eggs, making food security one of his administration’s priorities.

However, Agrarian Reform Consortium (KPA) secretary-general Dewi Kartika said the government’s botched agrarian reform program was to blame for the shortages as vast plots of farmland were constantly being encroached on by mining concessions and corporate plantations.

Agrarian reform was among the National Priority Programs pushed by Jokowi’s first-term administration in an effort to better distribute development and improve the quality of people’s lives.

It includes programs that are expected to alleviate poverty in villages, improve the country’s food security and land production, acknowledge ownership rights over land owned by individuals, the state and the general public, including land utilization in the popular interest.

“According to National Land Agency data, our farmland shrank by 650,000 ha in 2018. Much of this was converted to be used by other business sectors such as palm oil, natural resources extraction and infrastructure,” Dwi said in May.

She added that she feared the government’s plan to clear 600,000 ha of peatland in Central Kalimantan would yield the same result as a similar measure taken under former president Soeharto, which ended up leading to crop failures and subsequent food shortages.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...ntral-kalimantan-for-food-estate-program.html

@Viva_Viet :cheers:
Glad the gov is pursuing food security using the Food Estate system. The irrigations need to be properly constructed and maintained or we'll end up with more flooding.

Hopefully the gov can coordinate it well and it doesn't end up getting "repurposed" for other uses.



Pertamina loses partners, eyes new investors for refinery megaprojects
  • Norman Harsono
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, June 9, 2020 / 07:04 pm

2019_07_30_77233_1564476004._large.jpg

Through the Refinery Development Master Plan (RDMP) project, state-owned oil and gas holding company Pertamina will increase the capacity of its Balikpapan refinery by around 38 percent. (Courtesy of Pertamina/.)


State-owned oil giant Pertamina is scouting for new partners to develop multibillion dollar oil refineries in Indonesia after its previous partners, from Saudi Aramco to Oman’s Overseas Oil and Gas LLC (OOG), pulled out.

Pertamina recently signed deals with Taiwanese petrochemical giant CPC and a South Korean consortium to develop the Balongan and Tuban refineries respectively. It is eyeing other companies from various countries for other refineries, according to company spokesperson Fajriyah Usman.

The refineries, once completed, are expected to double Indonesia’s fuel output, enabling Pertamina to meet the country’s growing transportation fuel demand without raising fuel imports, a major contributor to the nation’s trade deficit.


“None of these refineries have been removed [from the National Strategic Projects] and all of them are on track,” Fajriyah said on June 5. Projects listed under the National Strategic Projects are eligible for government aid, providing an incentive for investment.

Indonesia has set a goal to process more resources domestically to boost export revenue and narrow the nation’s current account deficit, which continues to weigh down the economy. Fajriyah and Pertamina megaprojects and petrochemical director Ignatius “Lete” Tallulembang, the man who oversees the refinery projects, shared updates from the national strategic projects.

Cilacap refinery

The five-year partnership between Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, Aramco, and Pertamina officially ended, allowing the latter to move forward in expanding its refinery in Cilacap, Central Java.

Lete said on June 5 that Aramco sent the partnership cancellation letter on April 21. The two companies had disagreed over the refinery’s value.

Thus, Pertamina sent on May 22 an offer to United Arab Emirates oil company Adnoc to replace Aramco in developing Cilacap. While waiting for a response, Pertamina plans to focus on developing the biofuel refinery facility within the Cilacap compound.

“The land is settled. We will look for opportunities to build what we can while waiting for a new partner,” he said.

Aramco declined to comment. Adnoc did not respond to queries from The Jakarta Post.

Bontang refinery

Development of the Bontang refinery in East Kalimantan has been put on hold while Pertamina looks for a new partner after its partnership agreement expired in December last year with Omani energy firm OOG. The project faced land acquisition issues.

“We will put in on hold. We will study the supply and demand again. Once that’s clear, we will talk to stakeholders,” said Lete.

Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Pandjaitan said in December last year his office was looking at UAE oil companies Mubadala and Adnoc to replace OOG in developing Bontang.

Read also: Pertamina mulls relocating multibillion-dollar project to Sumatra over land issue

Balikpapan refinery

The Balikpapan refinery, which is the only project to have begun construction, reached 17 percent completion as of May 24, with pipes and valves on site, according to Pertamina.

Lete said the project, located in East Kalimantan with 5,300 workers under employment, would continue despite supply chain problems due to lockdowns around the world as countries work to contain COVID-19.

“Based on the current progress, the expected completion date is still as initially planned; mid-2023,” he said.

Balongan refinery

The first phase of the three-phase Balongan refinery expansion project in West Java would be completed in 2022, the earliest among all refinery projects, said Lete.

Pertamina signed on June 5 a deal with its Taiwanese counterpart CPC to develop the third phase of the Balongan facility, which is an $8 billion petrochemical plant slated for operation in 2026.

Pertamina president director Nicke Widyawati said Friday the project could help Pertamina become “a major petrochemical business player in the Asia-Pacific” over the next 10 years.

The facility is expected to produce 1 million tons of ethylene each year. Ethylene, like most petrochemicals, is predominantly used to make plastic products.

CPC vice president JZ Fang said the project’s total value was NT$250 billion (US$8.36 billion), as reported by Taiwanese media outlets.

He also said CPC and Pertamina would hold a 45 percent stake each with the remaining 10 percent reserved for potential investors.

Tuban refinery

Pertamina has continued to struggle with land-related issues over a refinery in Tuban, East Java.

The oil company secured all 328 hectares of land owned by the Environment and Forestry Ministry as of May 11 and completed 86 percent of its coastline restoration program as of May 23.

Lete said Pertamina had also purchased 37 percent of 384 ha of privately owned land in the project site with plans to purchase the remaining 63 percent by the third quarter.

“The engineering design goes on but was slightly affected by the [social restrictions], resulting in a slight slowdown in progress,” he said.

Dumai refinery

Pertamina signed on May 22 a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Indonesian state construction firm PT Nindya Karya and a South Korean consortium to look into a $1.5 billion refinery expansion in Dumai, Riau.

“This is still a very early stage deal. It’s a non-binding MoU,” Lete said on Friday.

Read also: Pertamina, South Korean consortium to develop Dumai refinery

He said Pertamina was also in talks with United States energy firm ConocoPhillips to produce a methanol gas processing facility in Dumai.

Plaju refinery

The Plaju refinery, which is set to specialize in producing palm oil-based biofuels, is at its basic engineering design phase.

Pertamina also plans to experiment producing bioavtur (aviation fuel), biogasoline and biodiesel in the Plaju refinery, located in South Sumatra, this year.

“We will conduct efficiency and modernization measures but we will focus first on developing the biorefinery,” said Lete.

Pertamina and Italian oil company Eni recently ended their partnership to develop the Plaju refinery. The two companies faced complications related to the European Union’s palm oil standards, which are more stringent than Indonesia’s standards due to deforestation concerns.

In short, avoid EU partners for anything related to energy because of palm oil... and avoid Saudi Arabia because their requested profit margins are simply disadvantageous to us.
 
Glad the gov is pursuing food security using the Food Estate system. The irrigations need to be properly constructed and maintained or we'll end up with more flooding.

Hopefully the gov can coordinate it well and it doesn't end up getting "repurposed" for other uses.





In short, avoid EU partners for anything related to energy because of palm oil... and avoid Saudi Arabia because their requested profit margins are simply disadvantageous to us.

Borneo is not suited for food farm estates, Papua soil is much more promising especially around Baliem valley. Heck even Sulawesi is much better than Borneo. Borneo largely comprised of peatland and swampy soil, there is a lot hussle to make them suited to planted something like rices or maize and thats a very expensive undertaking.
 
Indonesian government appointed female spoke person for Covid 19 task force. I think it will be a good addition since we only have one spoke person for the task previously who is Ahmad Heriyanto. Ahmad Heriyanto never got a single holiday since the task force is created in early March. The new additional spoke person is Dr Reisa Broto Asmoro.


Good choice :D. @jamahir will say she can fatten up a bit though :lol:
 

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