www.thejakartaglobe.com
Indonesia will proceed with a ban on exports of raw minerals, with some
exemptions for miners that plan to build local processing facilities,
and will publish details of the rule on May 6.
“Miners will
still be allowed to export after meeting some requirements, including
obtaining permits," Edi Prasodjo, a director of coal at the Energy and
Mineral Resources Ministry, said at a conference in Jakarta today. “The
IUP must be clean and clear, paying taxes and royalties,” Prasodjo said,
referring to a mining business license by its Indonesian initials.
Indonesia,
the largest nickel-ore and bauxite supplier to China announced the
prohibition in February, two years ahead of schedule. The new rules
apply to holders of mining business licenses issued after 2009.
Companies with a so-called contract of work, including US-based Freeport
McMoRan and Newmont Mining, will be allowed to ship ores until 2014.
The
government will order miners exempted from the ban to sign a letter of
commitment that they will stop all ore shipments by 2014, Thamrin
Sihite, director general of minerals and coal at the Energy Ministry,
said last month. The exporters must also obtain an export permit from
the Trade Ministry, said Deddy Saleh, director general of foreign trade
at the ministry.
Indonesia may choose to gradually tighten
supplies by using taxation instead of continuing with the ban, Demian
Reed, general manager commercial for bauxite and alumina at Rio Tinto
Alcan, said on April 25.
Coal Exports
The
government has no plans to apply a coal-export tax so far because it
hasn’t formally discussed such a tax with all stakeholders, Prasodjo
said on Thursday.
“The government wants to focus more on how to control coal production,” he said without elaborating.
The
Indonesia Mining Association estimated in March that the ban would cut
nickel-ore and bauxite exports by as much as 75 percent this year.
Indonesia shipped 33 million metric tons of nickel ore and 40 million
tons of bauxite last year, according to Syahrir Abubakar, the group’s
executive director.
The curbs, aimed at lifting the value of
shipments and boosting local smelting capacity, apply to exports of raw
metals including iron ore, gold, and silver, and bring them in line with
the rules that have applied to tin since 2002, with only refined
exports permitted.
Indonesia is the world’s biggest shipper of tin, used in packaging and as solder.
Freeport
runs the Grasberg mine in Papua Province, and Newmont operates the Batu
Hijau copper mine on Sumbawa Island. Grasberg contains the world’s
largest recoverable copper reserves, according to Freeport.
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/business/indonesia-ban-on-unprocessed-metal-exports-effective-may-6/515806
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