Assalamu'alaikum wr.wb.

 

Selamat pagi, salam IAGI..

perkenalkan saya Rina, staff geologi PT. Carsurin Laboratorium Batubara dan
Mineral, terimakasih pak Fakhrur atas informasinya mengenai coal
liquefaction plant. 

 

Saya mau menanyakan pak, apakah ada contact person-nya dari Jepang tersebut
pak?

 

Sekian , terimakasih.

 

Best Regards,

 

Rina Susilaningsih

PT. Carsurin

Coal & Mineral Department

Sarana Penjaminan Bldg. 7th Floor,

Jl. Angkasa Block B-9, Kav. 6,

Kota Baru Bandar Kemayoran,

Jakarta 10720

INDONESIA

Phone  : +62 21 6540 328/428/416

Facs    : +62 21 6540 346

Mobile : +62 81 579 572 39

E-mail :  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

              <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Web   :  <http://www.carsurin.com/> www.carsurin.com

 

  _____  

From: M Fakhrur Razi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2007 2:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [iagi-net-l] First coal liquefaction plant proposed for South
Kalimantan

 

Hasil kerjasama baru dengan Jepang yang ditandatangani bulan lalu, jepang
akan membantu kita untuk mengembangkan coal liquefaction plant.
Mudah-mudahan coalnya masih ada gak habis di curi pertambangan liar  ...... 

 

 

First coal liquefaction plant proposed for South Kalimantan 

Ika Krismantari, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Following its establishment in May, a consortium made up of coal mining
firms will soon begin a feasibility study on plans to build the country's
first coal liquefaction plant.

Bukin Daulay, the director of the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry's
Mineral and Coal Technology Research and Development Center, said Friday
that the feasibility study on the project would begin in August and would
take six months to complete. 

"JBIC (Japan Bank for International Cooperation) will finance the
feasibility study by providing a grant of US$500,000," Bukin said following
a meeting between the consortium and government officials. 

He said that the consortium had agreed during the meeting to build the
US$1.3 billion plant in coal-mining firm Arutmin's mining concession in
Satui, South Kalimantan. 

Based on the results of a pre-feasibility study by Japanese research firms
in 2002, Satui was the most suitable site for the project, Bukin said. 

He also said that Arutmin might supply 2.5 million tons to the plant, which
would convert coal into liquid fuels like gasoline and diesel, and have an
initial capacity of 13,500 barrels per day. 

The other members of the consortium would likely contribute to the project
in the form of equity. However, precise figures had yet to be discussed,
Bukin said. 

The price of the plants output would be highly competitive, at an average
price of $35 per barrel, compared to crude oil, whose price is expected to
reach $100 per barrel in the next few years, said Eiichiro Makino, a coal
industry consultant advising the ministry. 

The plant is expected to come onstream in 2013. 

Coal liquefaction is one of the alternative sources of energy that will be
promoted by the government as part of its efforts to decrease the country's
dependency on oil. 

Under the government's latest energy policy, coal liquefaction should
account for 2 percent of the total national energy mix by 2025. 

The government hopes that the capacity of the South Kalimantan plant can be
raised to 27,000 barrels per day by 2017 at a cost of $2.1 billion. 

In order to meet the 2 percent target, Indonesia will need the develop coal
liquefaction plants with a combined output of 189,000 barrels per day by
2025

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