http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/SEA-01-100214.html

  Feb 10, '14

How to kill an industry in Indonesia
By John McBeth 


JAKARTA - Indonesia's exports of mineral ore are now at a standstill, with 
unprocessed bauxite and nickel the target of an outright ban and mining 
companies either refusing or unable to pay the draconian new export duty on 
copper and the other concentrates that were given a 12th-hour three-year 
extension. 

That's only half of the story. Far from clear is whether enforced on-shore 
processing of mineral ores will actually work when there are serious doubts 
about the economic viability of building smelters and hydrometallurgical 
processors in an already over-supplied global market. 

The dysfunctional way in which the government has implemented      
the new value-added policy, with unrealistic deadlines and a clear lack of 
preparation or understanding of its own contracts of work (COW), has shaken the 
Indonesian mining industry to its core. 

A government regulation extending the January 12 ban for copper giants Freeport 
Indonesia and Newmont Nusa Tenggara and 66 other, mostly Indonesian, mining 
companies was undercut the next day by the export tax, which rises from an 
already daunting 20-25% in the first year to a prohibitive 60% in the second 
half of 2016. 

This year's legislative and presidential elections in April and July make it 
highly unlikely any relief will be forthcoming, at least to the industry's 
satisfaction, unless the trade deficit widens alarmingly or until a new 
administration is installed in October. 

In the meantime, already rampant ore smuggling will likely increase 
dramatically and the central government may face a rising tide of resentment 
from provincial administrations, angry at losing a valuable source of revenue 
and worried about social unrest from newly-unemployed mine workers. 

Trotting out fanciful figures gobbled up by a nationalist Indonesian media, 
officials contend the benefits from building the new plants in the next three 
years will more than make up for the short-term loss of tens of thousands of 
jobs and billions of dollars in export revenues. 

According to one optimistic forecast, the value of copper cathode and aluminum 
alone will have doubled by 2017, the seemingly magical year when some 
bureaucrats have talked grandly about finished metal contributing to a 
five-fold increase in national mining revenues. 

But while the government claims there are 25 projects either under construction 
or at various stages of advanced planning, the available evidence suggests they 
will fall far short of filling the yawning revenue gap - even in the medium 
term - at a time when world mineral prices have taken a dive. 

Conflicting reports show the seven projects supposedly nearing completion will 
refine only modest amounts of zircon, iron sand, iron ore, bauxite, manganese 
and nickel, with another 10 less than 50% complete. 

Indosmelt's long-planned US$1.5 billion copper smelter in South Sulawesi is not 
among them - and, most crucially, is still awaiting financing - and the two 
alumina plants being built will absorb less than 20% of the 15 million tons of 
bauxite ore Indonesia shipped in 2011. 

Alumina processing does make sense. The government recently took full control 
of Indonesia's sole aluminum smelter from its Japanese partners, but as it has 
done for the past 30 years the plant continues to use imported alumina, the 
product from the intermediate stage of the refining process. 

Nickel doesn't look any rosier. Bintang Delepan is still in the very early 
stages of a $1.2 billion, 300,000-ton nickel processor in Central Sulawesi. But 
apart from two small Chinese-funded nickel pig iron plants, there is little 
else to point to that would make a dent in previous ore production. 

Canada's Sherritt recently abandoned a Sulawesi nickel joint venture with Rio 
Tinto, and French-owned Eramet's $5 billion Weda Bay nickel project in 
Halmahera hangs in the balance because of pricing and regulatory uncertainties. 
Ominously, the company has just laid off 200 of its 700 workers. 

Revenues at risk
Minerals and related products have in the past accounted for up to 20% of 
Indonesia's exports. Copper brought in $7.2 billion in annual receipts in 2011, 
followed by nickel ($3.1 billion), tin ($2.4 billion) and bauxite ($1.1 
billion). 

So far there have been no requests for export licenses and, even if there were, 
the Trade Ministry is still waiting for the Mines and Energy Ministry to come 
up with mineral reference prices on which to base a new export duty it 
initially knew nothing about. 

That's because of the last-minute scramble at President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono's home on the evening of January 11, when officials working on the 
regulation, which temporarily exempts semi-processed ore from the export ban, 
realized the deadline was midnight, not January 12 itself. 

According to sources familiar with what transpired at the meeting, Finance 
Minister Chatib Basri was left to tackle the tax issue - and did so the 
following day, apparently without conferring with Economic Coordinating 
Minister Hatta Rajasa or Mines and Energy Minister Jero Wacik. 

It is doubtful, however, whether anything would have been different if he had. 
A fortnight later, Freeport executives found themselves in the extraordinary 
position of having to walk ministers and senior officials through the company's 
Contract of Work (COW), which rules out any new taxes. 

Even then, Industry Minister M S Hidyat, a Golkar appointee who has taken a 
harder line than anyone in the cabinet on the smelter issue, has since claimed 
the COW - signed in 1991 - does not have the same legal standing as legislation 
and should be amended. 

Forget the big boys for a minute. Unable to raise the money to build costly 
smelters or pay the export tax, scores of small domestic mining companies are 
shedding jobs and seeking recourse with the Supreme Court to get the ban 
overturned. It is hardly a good advertisement for a policy that is meant to 
benefit Indonesians. 

Freeport and Newmont, for their part, are now reluctantly threatening 
international arbitration. Paying even a token duty would undercut their case. 
It would also allow the government to make further inroads into the sanctity of 
the contracts, which had previously been regarded as legally rock solid. 

In demanding 99% purity for refined copper, compared to only 70% for nickel, 
the government has clearly made the two US-owned miners the main targets of its 
value-added policy, first outlined in vague "refining and processing" terms in 
the 2009 Mining Law. 

Important for the feasibility of further processing is the fact that 96% of 
copper's market value is created at the mining and concentration stage. Only a 
marginal 4-5% is added during smelting when the metal content of the product is 
raised from 30% to 100% after the removal of sulfur and iron slag. 

Mining officials and other critics claim companies had five years to conform 
with the onshore processing requirement, but it was not until the belated 
issuance of Regulation 7/2012 - fully three years later - that miners had any 
inkling of what purity was required for each mineral. 

Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, the head of the presidential monitoring unit and a 
former mines and energy minister, told this correspondent last year he had 
pleaded with mining officials over and over again to expedite the implementing 
regulations because of the looming deadline. 

Blind policy
Beyond appealing to nationalist sentiments - and painting itself into a corner 
- the government does not appear to have done any significant research on the 
global processing industry and how Indonesia, with its inefficiencies and poor 
infrastructure, will compete on the overseas market. 

Some analysts suspect it may be following the template of tin, which has been 
under similar export restrictions since 2002. But Indonesia controls 60% of the 
world's tin supply. Its share of the copper, nickel and bauxite markets is 
substantially less and does not provide the same leverage. 

The only known comprehensive studies on the subject have been made by 
Washington based-consultancy Nathan Associates and Indonesia's Bandung 
Institute of Technology (ITB), both of which expressed serious reservations 
about the viability of the new blanket policy. 

On top of that, the process of planning and building a smelter is more likely 
to take five years than three when even state-owned Aneka Tambang struggled for 
18 months to get government approvals to build an extension to its existing 
ferro-nickel smelter in Sulawesi. 

Only Aneka Tambang and Brazil's Vale process their own nickel, with the latter 
relying on its own 350 megawatt hydro-electric plant to supply the power. The 
export ban will have an impact on Antam's revenues because it was still 
exporting substantial amounts of ore. 

Finance Minister Basri, who called the export ban "a form of punishment" for 
companies failing to build processors, had this to say about Aneka Tambang's 
experience with red tape: "That's why this policy should be combined with the 
ease of doing business. We will do our best to reduce the bureaucratic hurdles.
ow many times have international executives in Indonesia heard such empty 
promises? With national oil production sinking from a million barrels to just 
850,000 barrels a day over the past decade, ExxonMobil has been battling 
licensing and land issues for most of that time to develop its Cepu oilfield in 
East Java. 

The 165,000-a-day field is still not on stream, despite the fact that 
ExxonMobil's partner in Indonesia's biggest onshore discovery in 30 years is 
the once all-powerful Pertamina state oil company. A senior mines official 
explained the delay during a presentation last year: "Too much democracy." 

Since the government embarked on its current mining policy, most exploration 
has dried up because, miners say, increasingly onerous regulatory changes have 
made it impossible to raise the finance needed to open any sizable mine. 

In the mid-1990s, there were 150 junior exploration firms in Indonesia. Today, 
the number is down to five. For one of them, Kalimantan Gold, the export ban - 
and the subsequent loss of operating capital it was receiving from Freeport - 
may be the last straw. 

"I gathered my staff of 100 and told them I had good news and bad news," says 
Australian vice-president for exploration Mansur Geiger, who has lived in 
Central Kalimantan for decades. "The good news was they would get a year-end 
bonus. The bad news was it was their severance pay." 

Moreover, not one of the 111 affected mining companies met the December 31, 
2013, deadline for re-negotiating adjustments to their COWs to conform with the 
new licensing regime prescribed under the 2009 Mining Law. 

One major reason is that Ministerial Regulation 27/2013 not only increases the 
pace of divestment laid out in attachments to the 2009 law, but also erodes the 
principle of "fair market value" if the government wants to take a stake. 

Arbitrary decree
Jakarta-based resource lawyer Bill Sullivan calls last September's bombshell 
decree a "tipping point", noting that it appears to disregard the rights of the 
COW holders to a degree that may invite additional arbitration. 

As things stand, a lack of domestic capital means government divestment targets 
will be tough to meet - more so after Regulation 27 inexplicably ruled out a 
public listing as one way for a foreign company to meet that obligation. 

As the two biggest companies on the block, Freeport and Newmont serve as trip 
wires for an industry still baffled by a policy that would make a lot more 
sense if it was applied selectively and in accordance with realistic 
timetables. 

Newmont is in the worst position because its Batu Hijau mine on the island of 
Sumbawa has much lower ore grades. Executives have said the company will be 
forced to close and lay off its 9,000 workers if the smelting and tax 
requirements remain in place. 

Freeport's situation may be more urgent. Indonesia's sole Mitsubishi-run 
smelter in Gresik, East Java, which processes 35% of the company's concentrate, 
is down for month-long maintenance. With its port-side warehouses likely to 
reach capacity in mid-February, it will have to curtail mine operations and lay 
off staff. 

Perhaps even more concerning is the fact that the 10,000 artisanal miners 
panning for gold in Freeport's downstream mine waste will suddenly have their 
livelihoods disrupted, leaving security forces guarding the Papua mine with an 
unruly mob it may be unable to control. 

The firm's workforce has risen from 19,000 to 30,000 in the three years since 
it began the $10 billion process of moving from an open pit to a wholly 
underground operation. Each year, it is spending $550-$600 million building a 
tunnel and electric rail and conveyor system that will tap into five separate 
ore bodies and eventually extend to a staggering 950 kilometers. 

Yet with only seven years to go, Phoenix-based parent Freeport McMoRan Copper & 
Gold still doesn't know whether the government will honor an implied pledge in 
its 1991 COW for two 10-year extensions - and what the terms will be if it 
does. 

Chief executive Richard Adkerson told analysts last year the contract had 
"undisputed firm legal standing", apparently referring to wording which says 
approval for the two extensions "will not be unreasonably withheld". After what 
transpired during a recent trip to Jakarta, he must be feeling a lot less 
confident. 

Given the imperatives of maintaining production at the world's most profitable 
mine, which has already been hit by two prolonged closures in the past two 
years, the country's largest single taxpayer can not just stop work and wait 
for that to happen. 

When Hatta Rajasa met Freeport executives in 2012, he demanded the company 
build a smelter and associated fertilizer plant - in addition to a power 
station and a cement factory already on the table - as the price for a contract 
renewal. 

Where it gets confusing is that among the minister's expert staff at subsequent 
sessions has been a prominent businessman with links to one of the two copper 
smelter projects planned by Indonesian joint ventures. 

While Freeport and Newmont have always said up to now they will not invest in 
such a marginally profitable business, they have agreed to supply their 
remaining concentrate to any new smelter - as long as it is at commercial 
prices. 

Looking at the financial track records of Freeport's own smelter in Spain and 
the sole Indonesian facility at Gresik, the only way to turn a profit is for 
the new ventures to acquire the concentrate at a cut rate. The latter facility, 
for example, has an operating margin of 1%, compared with 35% for the mining 
operation. 

As it has now indicated, Freeport may end up-biting-the bullet, simply because 
it has too much at stake. But that would be conditional on the government 
dropping the export ban and entering into a public-private relationship that 
would carry with it the promise of incentives. 

The power requirements alone for what would be a $2.7 billion smelter on the 
south coast of Papua would add significantly to the additional 130 megawatts it 
will need for its extended underground operation. 

The company is working with the provincial government on a planned "run-of-the 
river" hydro-plant, 100 kilometers to the northwest, which it hopes will negate 
the need for another coal-fired station. 

While its current contract frees it of any divestment requirement until it runs 
out in 2021, Freeport will clearly still have to make some significant 
concessions as the price for retaining control of the fabulously-rich Grasberg 
deposit it has been mining since the early 1990s. 

The company continues to toy with the idea of giving a stake to Papua's 
provincial government. It should have been done years ago and probably would 
have, if a politically connected Jakarta lawyer hadn't intervened at the last 
minute and told the Papuans they would get a free carry if they waited a little 
longer. 

John McBeth-is a former correspondent with the Far Eastern Economic Review. He 
is currently a Jakarta-based columnist for the Straits Times of Singapore.- 

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