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Social Justice Warrior at it again


@Logam42 @Indos

Look like not a big problem, just a float problem due to the location which is near the river. I believe the location there are still quite green, so it is not a big problem. Maybe some drainage infrastructure can be built to answer the issue.

Talking about the number of new smelters that we are going to build which are around 48, I think it is already enough to absorb many of the raw materials that are produced by our mining industry. I hope we can actually stop all of the raw material export in 2023, following ore nicle export ban in 2021.

Freeport has said they need extension until 2024 to get their smelter ready first. I believe we should not listen to Freeport and just do what has been stated in our new mining law to ban all of the raw material in 2023. Freeport just need to build big warehouse to store their product like gold and others if the ban is imposed in 2023. Freeport has always done this kind of thing, if we are not tough on them, they will ridicule us.

Here I will give previous news about Antam smelters development.

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Metal miner Antam to set $105m capex, pay out $4.78m in dividends

Norman Harsono

The Jakarta Post Jakarta / Fri, June 12, 2020 / 03:47 pm


Publicly listed state-owned metal miner PT Aneka Tambang (Antam) plans to set around Rp 1.5 trillion (US$105 million) in capital expenditure (capex) this year, mostly to build two smelter megaprojects.

Antam finance director Anton Herdianto said on Thursday most of the funds were slated for two smelter megaprojects, while the remainder would be for exploration activity, subsidiaries and regular investments. “We are still revising the 2020 capex in relation to COVID-19.

It is awaiting shareholder approval,” he said after an annual shareholders meeting (RUPST), adding that Rp 180 billion had been absorbed as of the first quarter. Antam produces silver, gold, nickel and bauxite, the raw material used to produce aluminum.

The company is also developing a $289 million nickel smelter in East Halmahera, North Maluku and a $900 million alumina refinery in Mempawah, West Kalimantan. The publicly listed miner announced it would pay out Rp 67.84 billion in dividends for its shareholders, which is mainly state-owned mining holding company MIND.ID. The dividends represent 35 percent of Antam’s profit booked last year.

This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "Metal miner Antam to set $105m capex, pay out $4.78m in dividends - Business - The Jakarta Post". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...et-105m-capex-pay-out-4-78m-in-dividends.html.


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Look like not a big problem, just a float problem due to the location which is near the river. I believe the location there are still quite green, so it is not a big problem. Maybe some drainage infrastructure can be built to answer the issue.

Talking about the number of new smelters that we are going to build which are around 48, I think it is already enough to absorb many of the raw materials that are produced by our mining industry. I hope we can actually stop all of the raw material export in 2023, following ore nicle export ban in 2021.

Freeport has said they need extension until 2024 to get their smelter ready first. I believe we should not listen to Freeport and just do what has been stated in our new mining law to ban all of the raw material in 2023. Freeport just need to build big warehouse to store their product like gold and others if the ban is imposed in 2023. Freeport has always done this kind of thing, if we are not tough on them, they will ridicule us.

Here I will give previous news about Antam smelters development.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Metal miner Antam to set $105m capex, pay out $4.78m in dividends

Norman Harsono

The Jakarta Post Jakarta / Fri, June 12, 2020 / 03:47 pm


Publicly listed state-owned metal miner PT Aneka Tambang (Antam) plans to set around Rp 1.5 trillion (US$105 million) in capital expenditure (capex) this year, mostly to build two smelter megaprojects.

Antam finance director Anton Herdianto said on Thursday most of the funds were slated for two smelter megaprojects, while the remainder would be for exploration activity, subsidiaries and regular investments. “We are still revising the 2020 capex in relation to COVID-19.

It is awaiting shareholder approval,” he said after an annual shareholders meeting (RUPST), adding that Rp 180 billion had been absorbed as of the first quarter. Antam produces silver, gold, nickel and bauxite, the raw material used to produce aluminum.

The company is also developing a $289 million nickel smelter in East Halmahera, North Maluku and a $900 million alumina refinery in Mempawah, West Kalimantan. The publicly listed miner announced it would pay out Rp 67.84 billion in dividends for its shareholders, which is mainly state-owned mining holding company MIND.ID. The dividends represent 35 percent of Antam’s profit booked last year.

This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "Metal miner Antam to set $105m capex, pay out $4.78m in dividends - Business - The Jakarta Post". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...et-105m-capex-pay-out-4-78m-in-dividends.html.


Download The Jakarta Post app for easier and faster news access:
Android: http://bit.ly/tjp-android
iOS: http://bit.ly/tjp-ios

Freeport Indonesia now is Indonesian company, hold by Inalum consortium by majority stocks of 51,23 percentage. The owner is Indonesia , it is should be under ministry of BUMN responsibilities of why they needed more time to build more smelter, btw.

What i know from some insider, Freeport Indonesia is in major transition phase from open mining pit operation to underground mining operation. Such large scale transition need money and technical support to do so, and currently our BUMN ministry itself is giving much concern to their transition efforts to goes on smoothly, so their takeover in 2018 can bear immediate profit.
 
Social Justice Warrior at it again


@Logam42 @Indos

Overall the points bought up the article is mostly reasonable. Looking at the journalist's previous articles there is no strong indication he's an SJW (looks more overworked then anything). The part about flooding is... unverifiable. I think its fair that the presence of such a structure cause friction with local communities. This is the case in nearly all countries. Note that the environmental advocate claimed to represent farmers & fishers, i.e people who aren't employed in the smelter. Arguably they just want a cash grab.

While the talk about the flooding being caused by the smelter is unreasonable, if the drainage system is faulty than it should be fixed. It won't stop the flood but it will mitigate it.

Points about the backtracking target of smelters is factual, though as the article states itself previous growth was only 3 smelters a year, so even a fraction of 48 smelters is going to be a huge leap in growth, especially since the world is sick anyway so demand is down. The delays from Covid is also acknowledged as well, but they did not say that DPR is pushing for the gov to deny PTFI request for relaxation.

So it is slanted, but about what you'd expect from Tirto.

Overall I'd still consider this factual, if slanted news. Trust me when I say Tirto has produced news of waaaaayyyy lower quality than this.
 
BREAKING

August PMI is 50.8 for Indonesia.
While barely above 50, this means that the Indonesian manufactory sector is expanding.

This is great news as it indicates that there is a good chance that Q3 GDP will be a very narrow negative or even stagnant from last year.

 
Budget realization for economic recovery reaches Rp192 trillion

21 hours ago



Documentation — Residents undertake exercise as part of a national campaign aimed to encourage the public to be disciplined in wearing face masks, at the Bung Karno Sports Stadium in Jakarta on Sunday (August 30, 2020). Chief of the Committee for COVID-19 Handling and National Economic Recovery, Airlangga Hartarto, stressed that national economic resurgence amid the COVID-19 pandemic would involve public discipline and compliance with the protocol on wearing masks. (ANTARA FOTO/Aprillio Akbar/foc)


The figure is quite encouraging.
Jakarta (ANTARA) - The Finance Ministry has reported that the realization of the budget for national economic recovery has reached Rp192.53 trillion as of August 26, 2020, accounting for 27.7 percent of the budget ceiling of Rp695.2 trillion.



“The figure is quite encouraging,” chief of the Financial Sector Policy Center of the Fiscal Policy Board at the Finance Ministry, Adi Budiarso, said at a hearing with Commission VI of the House of Representatives (DPR) here on Monday.



The realization of budget funds for the health sector has reached Rp12.3 trillion of the Rp87.55-trillion ceiling; social protection Rp101.06 trillion of the Rp203.9-trillion ceiling; business incentives Rp17.23 trillion of the Rp120.61-trillion ceiling; and, micro, small, and medium businesses Rp47.03 trillion of the Rp123.46-trillion ceiling.



The realization of the budget for the sectoral post of ministries, non-ministerial government institutions, and regional governments has touched Rp14.91 trillion of the Rp106.11-trillion ceiling, while the budget for corporate financing with a ceiling of Rp53.57 trillion has not been realized.



The realization of the budget for national economic recovery since the first half of 2020 has reached 24.4 percent of the total allocation.



To speed up national economic recovery, the government has extended several programs until December 2020, expedited the processing of new proposals from various clusters, redesigned programs to make them more effective, and shortened the bureaucratic process.



Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati has stressed that national economic recovery would largely depend on the availability of the coronavirus vaccine.



Once a vaccine is found, the government will distribute it to the public and expedite the treatment of COVID-19 patients, she said at an online discussion here last Thursday.



"Whether the vaccine will soon be discovered and can be distributed will have an extraordinary impact on all activities of the community, including economic activities," she opined.



She said the government has drafted various policies to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 through the National Economic Recovery (PEN) program. (INE)


Related news: Finance Ministry outlines three strategies for avoiding recession

Related news: Indonesia's economy starts to move: Minister Hartarto


EDITED BY INE




Reporter: Dewa Ketut SW/Suharto
Editor: Fardah Assegaf
COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2020


 
Govt urged to stop SNI marking manipulation for steel products

45 minutes ago



Doc. Workers checked the quality of steel in a factory of PT Krakatau Steel (Persero) Tbk that produces hot rolled coil (HRC) in Cilegon, Banten. ANTARA/Asep Fathulrahman/sh

Jakarta (ANTARA) - Indonesia's construction business operators have urged the government to apply stringent measures against the malpractice of manipulating the Indonesian National Standard (SNI) mark for steel products distributed in the local market.

The practice would be detrimental to the national steel industry and jeopardize infrastructure construction, Secretary General of the Indonesian National Construction Contractor Association (Gapensi) Andi Rukman Karumpa noted in a statement here on Tuesday.

"Amid the high demand for steel in line with the massive infrastructure projects, we found imported steel failing to meet the standard and having the SNI marking manipulated. This will endanger the construction projects and harm domestic steel producers," Karumpa affirmed.

The police had earlier blown the lid off an alleged manipulation of SNI marking on imported steel from Thailand. The marking on the imported product was manipulated to make it resemble a local product of PT Gunung Inti Sempurna (GIS) bearing the SNI certification.

The Jakarta Police named six suspects in the case, including the director of PT GIS, and seized 4,600 tons of imported steel.

Karumpa noted that steel imports are allowed, though strategic projects, such as the toll road construction work as well as the PLN and Pertamina projects, should utilize domestic component.

"The government would calculate the demand, and the local producers will supply it," he stated.

Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita had earlier reiterated that the government will safeguard the domestic industry from the flow of steel imports.

"It will require an instrument to boost the competitiveness of national products while simultaneously ensure the health and safety of consumers and the environment," he stated.

The National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) data indicated that the demand for iron and steel in 2020 had reached 16.39 million tons, and it was expected to increase 6.3 percent to touch 17.29 million tons in 2021.

Indonesia's iron and steel imports are mostly directed to meet demand in three industries: automotive, electronics, and shipping. The average utilization of national steel production has ranged between 40 to 60 percent.

Related news: National steel producer PT GRP pumps in Rp12 trillion investment
Related news: Krakatau Steel calls for governmental regulation to curb steel imports





Reporter: Royke Sinaga, Sri Haryati
Editor: Rahmad Nasution
COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2020

 
Bantuan-Alsintan-290820-Sa-4.jpg

Warga melihat alat dan mesin pertanian (Alsintan) traktor roda 4 bantuan Kementerian Pertanian yang akan diberikan kepada kelompok tani di Kabupaten Jombang, Jawa Timur, Sabtu (29/8/2020). Penyerahan bantuan Alsintan berupa, hand traktor, traktor roda 4, serta mesin panen padi untuk mendongkrak produksi pertanian. ANTARA FOTO/Syaiful Arif/hp.

Bantuan-Alsintan-290820-Sa-1.jpg

Warga melihat alat dan mesin pertanian (Alsintan) hand traktor bantuan Kementerian Pertanian yang akan diberikan kepada kelompok tani di Kabupaten Jombang, Jawa Timur, Sabtu (29/8/2020). Penyerahan bantuan Alsintan berupa, hand traktor, traktor roda 4, serta mesin panen padi untuk mendongkrak produksi pertanian. ANTARA FOTO/Syaiful Arif/hp.
 
antarafoto-lokasi-kawasan-industri-terpadu-batang-260820-hpp-2_1.jpg

Kereta api melintas di jalur kereta di sekitar Stasiun Plabuan berdekatan dengan wilayah Kawasan Industri Terpadu Batang, di Ketanggan, Kecamatan Gringsing, Kabupaten Batang, Jawa Tengah, Rabu (26/8/2020). Kawasan Industri Terpadu Batang dengan luas lahan sekitar 4.300 hektare yang dikunjungi oleh Presiden Joko Widodo pada 30 Juni 2020 itu terintegrasi dengan jalur kereta api dan terletak di sisi utara Tol Trans Jawa, dengan pembangunan mengusung konsep 'The Smart and Sustainable Industrial Estate' dan pembangunan pertama direncanakan pada Januari 2021 seluas 450 hektare. ANTARA FOTO/Harviyan Perdana Putra/wsj.

antarafoto-lokasi-kawasan-industri-terpadu-batang-260820-hpp-1_1.jpg

Kereta api melintas di jalur kereta di sekitar Stasiun Plabuan berdekatan dengan wilayah Kawasan Industri Terpadu Batang, di Ketanggan, Kecamatan Gringsing, Kabupaten Batang, Jawa Tengah, Rabu (26/8/2020). Kawasan Industri Terpadu Batang dengan luas lahan sekitar 4.300 hektare yang dikunjungi oleh Presiden Joko Widodo pada 30 Juni 2020 itu terintegrasi dengan jalur kereta api dan terletak di sisi utara Tol Trans Jawa, dengan pembangunan mengusung konsep 'The Smart and Sustainable Industrial Estate' dan pembangunan pertama direncanakan pada Januari 2021 seluas 450 hektare. ANTARA FOTO/Harviyan Perdana Putra/wsj.
 
Cash labor-intensive program absorbs 402,449 workers by Aug-end: govt

2 hours ago



The labor-intensive program implemented by the Public Works and Housing Ministry , the ministry's documentation


The PKT program involves Rp12.32 trillion, with the target of 638,990 beneficiaries. By August 29, 2020, the realization of PKT program reached Rp7.16 trillion, or nearly 58.14 percent of the total. The number of workers absorbed reached 402,449 or
Jakarta (ANTARA) - The Public Works and Housing Ministry claimed that 402,449 workers were employed through the cash labor-intensive (PKT) program by the end of August, constituting 62.98 percent of the targeted 638,990 beneficiaries.

"The allocated funding for PKT program reaches Rp12.32 trillion for the targeted 638,990 beneficiaries. By August 29, 2020, Rp7.16 trillion, or nearly 58.14 percent of the total was realized for the PKT program, with the number of workers absorbed reaching 402,449, or 62.98 percent," Public Works and Housing Minister Basuki Hadimuljono noted in a written statement released on Tuesday.

The ministry's budget allocations for the program are expected to help placate the social and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the people, including lowering the unemployment rate and boosting the public’s purchasing power, he expounded.

Hadimuljono noted that the PKT program, implemented in 23,392 locations across Indonesia, was one of the ministry's priorities.

By the end of August 2020, the realization of budget funding at the ministry had reached Rp41.17 trillion, constituting 48.13 percent of the budget ceiling of Rp85.70 trillion, he stated.

The budget ceiling for the ministry had earlier been set at Rp120.2 trillion. However, the government reallocated Rp44.58 trillion of that figure to address the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, he noted.

In further developments, the ministry had obtained an additional ceiling of Rp1.67 trillion to support the national economic recovery (PEN) program, national priority program, food estate development, and industrial estate development.

Furthermore, it received additional ceiling from the launch of foreign loans and grants of state sharia-compliant bonds worth Rp84.02 trillion.

"We allocated Rp1.362 trillion of the Rp1.67 trillion for the national economic recovery, Rp188 billion for national priority programs, and Rp125 billion for food estate development in Central Kalimantan and industrial estate development," he remarked.

By the end of August 2020, the realization of budget funding at the ministry reached Rp41.17 trillion, or 48.13 percent of the ceiling of Rp85.70 trillion for the budget year 2020. Meanwhile, the physical progress of the programs reached 48.15 percent. Related news: Cash labor-intensive program in water resource absorbs 163,003 workers
Related news: Labor-intensive program to help maintain rural economic growth







Reporter: Aji Cakti/Suharto
Editor: Rahmad Nasution
COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2020

 
Indonesia's 'Merah Putih' vaccine candidate to be ready for production mid 2021: Jokowi
Ivany Atina Arbi

The Jakarta Post

Jakarta / Tue, September 1, 2020 / 05:36 pm

1598962186735.png


A scientist works inside the research room for the Merah Putih vaccine candidate at state-owned pharmaceutical holding company PT Bio Farma's office in Bandung, West Java, on Wednesday, Aug. 12. (Antara/Dhemas Reviyanto)

Indonesia aims to begin producing its locally developed COVID-19 vaccine candidate by the middle of 2021, President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo said during a limited Cabinet meeting at the Bogor Palace, West Java, on Tuesday.

The President claimed the national consortium tasked with developing the potential vaccine was currently in the process of making "vaccine seeds". "The process is 30 to 40 percent done," he said, expressing hope that clinical trials could begin early next year.

"God willing, the vaccine will be ready for production by the middle of 2021," Jokowi said. Named after the color of Indonesia's flag, the Merah Putih (red and white) vaccine candidate is being developed by a national consortium under the Research and Technology Ministry, led by the Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology.

Read also: Indonesia secures massive supply of potential COVID-19 vaccine until end of 2021 The team,

comprising around 10 young researchers, is developing a vaccine specifically for the strain of the virus that has spread in Indonesia. Eijkman director Amin Soebandrio said previously that the Merah Putih vaccine candidate was expected to cover at least 50 percent of Indonesia's vaccine needs.

Indonesia has also secured 290 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine candidate, to be delivered until the end of next year, following recent ministerial visits to China and the United Arab Emirates. Foreign Minister Retno LP Marsudi previously revealed that the country had secured a commitment to be sent 20-30 million doses of potential vaccines by the end of this year, some 80-130 million doses in first quarter of next year and 210 million doses for the remainder of 2021.

Among the suppliers is China's pharmaceutical Sinovac Biotech, which has been closely cooperating with Indonesia to develop its vaccine candidate. Together, they began phase III clinical trials of the vaccine candidate in August, with tests being carried out on 1,620 volunteers in Bandung, West Java.

This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "Indonesia's 'Merah Putih' vaccine candidate to be ready for production mid 2021: Jokowi". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...-be-ready-for-production-mid-2021-jokowi.html.


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BREAKING

August PMI is 50.8 for Indonesia.
While barely above 50, this means that the Indonesian manufactory sector is expanding.

This is great news as it indicates that there is a good chance that Q3 GDP will be a very narrow negative or even stagnant from last year.

In most likely case it will be narrow negative in Q3 - Q4. Although I'm confident it will be rebound by Q1 2021 but not much
 
Satria satellite to boost digital economic transformation: Kominfo
3rd Sep 2020 16:09
Satria satellite to boost digital economic transformation: Kominfo


Jakarta (ANTARA) - Satellite of the Republic of Indonesia (Satria), scheduled to operate in 2023, will strengthen digital economic transformation, including supporting digital payment systems in rural areas, with inadequate internet infrastructure, Communication and Informatics Ministry (Kominfo) stated.

"The acceleration of digital transformation, directly and indirectly, supports the digital payment ecosystem during and after the pandemic," Dedi Permadi, special staff to the Minister of Communication and Informatics, remarked while addressing a webinar on digital payment here on Thursday.

The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered digital economic growth, as people are left with no other choice but to adapt to the digital ecosystem.

In April 2020, a month after the government announced the country's first confirmed COVID-19 cases, 4.3 million shops are applying the digital payment system, with transactions totaling Rp17.6 trillion.

Permadi expressed optimism that the country's 64 MSMEs will also conduct digital payment transformation. Currently, only 9.4 million or 14.8 percent of MSMEs utilized digital transactions and business systems.

However, several Indonesian regions do not have fourth generation of the Internet, or 4G internet networks. Hence, it called for the country to develop more information and communication technology infrastructure.

"As many as 479 thousand BTS are installed across Indonesia though deemed insufficient since Indonesia is huge," he stated.

Out of the country's 83,218 villages and sub-districts, 12,548 villages do not have 4G internet network, he noted.

Permadi is upbeat about these areas being able to enjoy the 4G facility by 2022.

Moreover, 150 thousand public service points are yet to have adequate internet facilities, including health, banking, and government services.

"Hence, we are optimistic that the development of telecommunication infrastructure would be completed and the Satria Satellite would become operational in the third quarter of 2023," he stated.

A cooperation agreement on the launch of Satria, as a multi-function satellite, was scheduled to be inked on Thursday, to reach 150 thousand public service points yet to have access to internet services.

The Satria satellite is planned for launch in 2023 by SpaceX, Elon Musk's space transportation company, as a manufacturer of the satellite.

Related news: Indonesia begins to hire satellite for high speed internet
Related news: Indonesia hopes to build own satellite launch station



EDITED BY INE

Translated by: Dewa KSW, Fardah
Editor: Suharto

 
Legislators view palm oil as strategic commodity for national economy
3rd Sep 2020 13:55
Legislators view palm oil as strategic commodity for national economy


Jakarta (ANTARA) - Several members of the House of Representatives (DPR), in their statements received by Antara, opined that the palm oil commodity holds strategic value as a source of foreign exchange and to support the national economy.

Deputy Chairman of Commission IV of the DPR, Hasan Aminuddin, in a statement here, Wednesday, stated that the export value of palm oil products, including oleochemicals and biodiesel, reached around US$20 billion in 2019.

The exports of palm oil and its derivative products contributed to the country’s better trade balance.

"The Indonesian nation must be grateful for obtaining an extraordinary gift from God in the form of profuse palm oil, which is a source of foreign exchange and supports the national economy," he remarked.

Related news: Plantation Company prioritizing palm oil, sugar for food independence
Related news: Forestry partnerships in Jambi help small farmers, resolve conflicts


Aminuddin noted that palm oil plantations usually located in remote areas, with poor infrastructure, were able to drive development in such areas to become economic centers.

The role of palm oil is expected to become increasingly important in future, especially as it pertains to the increasing demand for support for sustainable food and energy supply.

Seconding this view, a member of the House's Commission IV from the PKB faction Luluk Nur Hamidah stated that palm oil has become a strategic commodity owing to its enormous contribution, both in terms of opening up job opportunities and foreign exchange for the country.

On the other hand, the lawmaker regretted the existence of black campaigns on palm oil conducted by the international community.

"European countries, which are export destinations, are doing this. Yes, there are indeed economic interests that are deliberately designed with environmental issues in mind," Hamidah noted.

The international community was aggressively conducting black campaigns, with an approach that seemed scientifically acceptable that products from palm oil were detrimental to health, as well as environmental issues.

Hamidah cited as an example the use of research approaches, for instance, products from palm oil being viewed as having saturated fats that are unhealthy and harmful for the heart.

"For them, the first point is that palm oil must be rejected since it does not support a healthy lifestyle. The second point concerns environmental issues. Hence, we are being caught from both ends, in terms of health and environmental issues," Hamidah stated.

Hamidah called on the government to counter black campaigns through concrete steps taken properly, such as supervision and guidance, to prevent environmental damage caused to palm oil plantations.

Related news: Government calls on BPDPKS to reach palm oil rejuvenation target
Related news: Digitalization helps boost palm oil co performance amid COVID-19

Translated by: Zuhdiar Laeis, Fardah
Editor: Sri Haryati

 
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.

Indonesia-Joko-Widodo-Luhut-Panjaitan-.jpg
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
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.
 

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