|
|
|
Company |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
%Change |
|
PTBA (state-owned) |
10,746 |
10,212 |
9,482 |
-7.1 |
|
Adaro Indonesia |
15,481 |
17,708 |
20,819 |
17.6 |
|
Kaltim Prima Coal |
13,099 |
15,528 |
17,577 |
13.2 |
|
Kideco |
8,038 |
10,381 |
11,500 |
10.8 |
|
Arutmin |
7,708 |
9,532 |
10,557 |
10.8 |
|
Berau Coal |
4,877 |
6,750 |
7,123 |
5.5 |
|
Indominco Mandiri |
3,705 |
4,435 |
5,335 |
20.3 |
|
Other CCOWs |
8,514 |
12,195 |
13,832 |
13.4 |
|
Local cooperatives |
4,848 |
5,806 |
6,681 |
15.1 |
|
TOTAL |
77,016 |
92,546 |
102,906 |
11.2 |
Note:
CCOW refers to companies with coal contracts of work. Local
cooperatives are small coal mining firms that obtain concessions at
the regional level. Source: Directorate of Mineral and Coal
Enterprises
Coal Exports Up, Account for 70 Percent of Production
Coal exports increased by 8.9 percent last year, from 66.5 million MT to 72.5 million MT. Half of the increase came from a long-term contract agreement by the Philippine National Power Corporation (NPC) and the Philippine National Oil Corporation (PNOC) for an additional three million MT of coal per year. The GOI predicted coal exports would increase in 2003 to 75 million MT, based upon three Taiwan Power contracts for 500,000 MT/year each with KPC, Tanito Harum and PTBA. KPC remained the country's largest coal exporter, shipping 16.6 million MT in 2002, followed by Adaro Indonesia, Arutmin, and Kideco Jaya Agung. Japan and Taiwan remain Indonesia's primary coal markets, accounting for over 40 percent of exports, followed by South Korea, the Philippines, Hong Kong and Malaysia (the U.S. receives about one percent of Indonesian coal exports).
Table 2. Coal Export Statistics (in thousands MT)
|
Company |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
%Change |
|
PTBA (state-owned) |
2,142 |
1,895 |
1,855 |
-2.1 |
|
Kaltim Prima Coal |
12,743 |
15,079 |
16,629 |
10.3 |
|
Adaro Indonesia |
9,671 |
11,446 |
12,688 |
10.9 |
|
Arutmin |
9,303 |
9,247 |
9,858 |
6.6 |
|
Kideco Jaya Agung |
6,525 |
7,321 |
6,750 |
-7.8 |
|
Indominco Mandiri |
3,863 |
4,371 |
5,334 |
22.0 |
|
Berau Coal |
3,344 |
4,415 |
5,072 |
14.9 |
|
Other CCOWs |
6,297 |
8,770 |
9,954 |
13.5 |
|
Local cooperatives |
4,302 |
3,971 |
4,314 |
8.6 |
|
TOTAL |
58,190 |
66,517 |
72,454 |
8.9 |
Source: Directorate of Mineral and Coal Enterprises
Coal-Fired Power Drives Domestic Demand
Domestic coal demand rose 6.6 percent to 29 million MT in 2002. Coal-fired power plants were the single largest consumers, accounting for about 19 million MT, or 65 percent of total demand. (Note: The large, 3400-MW coal-fired Suralaya power plant uses 30,000 tons of coal per day alone, supplied by PTBA, Adaro, Kideco, Jaya Agung and Arha Daya Coalindo.) Cement plants were the second largest consumers at about 17 percent, while non-industrial coal consumption accounted for just over 10 percent of domestic use.
The Energy Ministry predicts that domestic coal demand will increase to about 35 million MT per year over the next five years. Some of the increase would come from increased use of fuel briquette coal for households and industries. However, much of the additional demand will come from planned coal-fired independent power projects (IPPs) at Tanjung Jati B (1320 MW), Sibolga (200 MW) and Amurang (110 MW). (Note: state-owned PLN recently renegotiated new power purchase agreements with these three previously-canceled IPPs, and hopes to have them all on line by 2006. Last month, PLN also announced it would attempt to revive three other coal-fired IPPs in Central and West Java, at Tanjung Jati A, Cilacap and Serang.)
Systemic Problems Threaten Long-Term Health
Despite the good news, there are some systemic problems that threaten the long-term health of the coal mining industry. Regulatory duplication and overlap between the central and regional governments is one problem. The lack of a new, comprehensive draft mining law is another issue. One continuing concern is Indonesia's onerous taxation policy, which has resulted in an effective tax rate of over 60 percent (the Frasier Institute ranked Indonesia's tax regime a lowly 43 out of 47). The situation worsened following a 2001 decision to assess coal mining companies a 10 percent VAT for imported capital goods and services. As a result, coal investment has slumped from 778 million USD in 1997 to 135 million in 2001. The Indonesian Association of Coal Mining Companies reports that 33 coal mining investors have canceled projects, worth 1 billion USD, since 1999.
Comment
The coal industry's bright production statistics are somewhat illusory. New investment is not keeping up with demand. For now, coal companies can use existing reserves to feed the growing domestic and export markets, but new exploration is virtually zero. Absent greater legal certainty and tax reductions, we believe the Indonesian coal industry will lose market share to countries with higher investment potential, like Australia, South Africa and China.
###
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