Baca baris-baris pertama singkatnya para perampok lama jaman Orba jilid I yang 
pada bertengger sebagian di Singapur sekarang sudah siap dan mulai terjun berat 
dikalangan biofuel. Taruhannya bermilyar-milyar dolar. SBY-MJK dan 
pemerintahnya sudah terang gak bisa dan gak mau menghalangi serbuan bajaklaut 
sekarang. 
  Sejak 1967 SDA kita dirampok, sekarang hutan tropik kita akan dibabat tuntas 
dirubah jadi
  ladang apa saja yg bisa hasilkan biofuel. Hasilnya? Hampir semuanya buat para 
perampok tadi, sedikit untuk satpam dalam negeri. Seperti dulu bangsa dan wong 
cilik cuman akan dapat tetesan-tetesan tidak ada artinya. Proses kemiskinan dan 
pengrusakan lingkungan,
  akan terus, sampai negeri kita gundul, kocek rakyat yg kosong semangkin 
amburadul!!!
  Kecuali kalau bangsa ini melawan. Kita musti memakai 2009 untuk coba ngerem 
proses
  penjarahan ini. Resistensi ini akan panjang dan berat sekali. Apalagi kalau 
RRC juga akan
  berlaku kayak multinasional corporations, yaitu profit dijadikan agama. 
(Trimkasih buat Pak H Uncle yang kirim emil penting)
  TSL

Holy Uncle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  May 22, 2007

A who's who of Indonesian biofuel
By Bill Guerin

JAKARTA - Some of Indonesia's most influential and politically connected 
companies have refocused their business strategies and are joining hands 
with foreign investors to push forward the government's multi-billion dollar 
ambition to transform the country into the world's leading biodiesel 
producer.

But there are major political, financial and environmental risks to the 
grand designs, which arguably are being understated and threaten to 
complicate the emerging industry's outlook. The same local companies now 
leading Indonesia's biofuel drive incurred and defaulted on huge foreign 
debts in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Few fully repaid 
their debts and today they still dominate the country's logging, 
wood-processing and pulp industries. Several also have highly suspect 
environmental records.

Now, they are landing big new foreign joint-venture deals to develop the 
nascent biofuel sector, including major investments in palm-oil plantation 
development and big new processing facilities that benefit from government 
incentives and policies aimed at rapidly developing the sector. For 
instance, Chinese energy giant China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) is 
among 59 foreign and local energy investors who in January signed many 
biofuel-related renewable energy agreements worth US$12.2 billion.

CNOOC is China's leading energy company and leads the country's broad 
strategic efforts to reduce its dependence on imported crude oil and offset 
the use of coal. It has recently teamed up with local plantation giant Sinar 
Mas Agro Resources and Technology (SMART) and Hong Kong Energy in what is 
being billed as the world's largest biofuel project. It has plans to bring 
three biodiesel plants online this year and additional facilities in Papua 
and West Kalimantan provinces beginning in 2008.

SMART is listed on the Jakarta and Surabaya stock exchanges and is a 
subsidiary of the country's largest oil palm grower, Golden Agri-Resources 
Ltd. It is also part of the controversial Widjaja family's sprawling 
business empire, which includes Asia Pulp & Paper (APP), part of the Sinar 
Mas Group and Asia Pacific Resources International Ltd (APRIL), which in 
turn is controlled by Raja Garuda Mas International (RGM).

Therein, some analysts contend, lies big risks. At the height of the Asian 
financial crisis, Sinar Mas and APP defaulted on billions of dollars worth 
of loans, equivalent to more than a tenth of Indonesia's total foreign debt. 
Many have put those dark days behind them, but their reputations as reliable 
business partners are still in doubt. APRIL owner Sukanto Tanoto is 
Indonesia's richest man, according to a recent Forbes magazine survey, and 
he is recently on record as referring to palm oil as "green gold".

Global market forces are definitely driving up prices, but the family's past 
business practices are still questionable in the minds of certain credit 
analysts. Golden Agri-Resources Ltd plans a bond issue in Singapore this 
year, but US-based credit-rating agency Moody's has warned that the 
company's "complicated family-controlled organizational structure" risks 
funds being used to support affiliated companies.

The regionally-oriented RGM Asian Agri, which defaulted on $1.26 billion of 
debts owed to a consortium of foreign and local banks during the financial 
crisis, now operates over 200,000 hectares of palm oil, rubber and cocoa 
plantations across Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand. Ranked 
as one of Asia's largest primary producers of crude palm oil, the company 
manages more than 26 plantations totaling 160,000 hectares and 19 palm oil 
mills with a production capacity of more than 1 million tons. It also has 
three refineries processing crude palm oil into end products.

Riau province, home to both APP and APRIL's giant pulp and paper mills, has 
more recently become Indonesia's largest crude palm oil producing area. Both 
enterprises also have the lion's share of plantation concessions there. Out 
of a total of 1,806,533 hectares of plantation concessions, APP holds 
679,424 and APRIL 639,593. APRIL also has concessions for 57,807 hectares in 
the Riau islands.

Eyes on the Forest, a coalition of three environmental groups active in 
Riau, claimed that an independent investigation they conducted found that 
APRIL was involved in questionable forest clearance operations in two 
concession areas and that the company did not possess a valid logging 
license. APRIL has denied that it was not in "full legal compliance" and no 
legal action has been taken against the company.

APRIL announced earlier this month a plan to spend $60 million on a new 
biodiesel plant with Texas-based Fulcrum Power Services and is now building 
a second paper mill in Sumatra province which will double its capacity to 
800,000 tons per annum by year's end. Meanwhile, RGM's Asian Agri unit has a 
production capacity of about 1 million tons of crude palm oil per year, 
which is currently used mainly for food production, but the company now says 
it plans to build a palm-based biodiesel plant in the area.

Another major player is publicly listed PT Bakrie Sumatera Plantations 
(BSP), owned by the listed conglomerate PT Bakrie & Brothers, which is 80% 
owned by the family of Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Aburizal 
Bakrie. The family accumulated and defaulted on part of more more than $1 
billion in debts at the height of the Asian financial crisis related to a 
broad range of businesses.

BSP currently has concessions on 53,000 hectares of mixed plantations, the 
majority of them planted with oil palms. The company recently acquired 
another 25,500 hectares in Sumatra and expects to boost crude palm oil 
production to 180,000 tons this year, up from 158,000 in 2006. The company 
also operates three palm oil refineries in West Java and Sumatra and holds a 
70% stake in Bakrie Rekin Bio-Energy, a joint venture with state-owned 
contractor Rekayasa Industri, with whom it has started building a biodiesel 
plant in Batam with a capacity of 100,000 tons per year

The Widjaja and Bakries are not the only ones bidding to rehabilitate their 
businesses and restore their family fortunes through biofuel-related 
businesses. For instance, the Salim Group's publicly listed Indofood Agri 
Resources Ltd, with investments in oil palm plantations, commands a 60% 
share of Indonesia's cooking oil sector. It recently raised $275 million in 
a share sale in Singapore to be partially used for biofuel-related outlays. 
The group was founded by Liem Sioe Liong, a renowned business associate of 
former strongman president Suharto.

Meanwhile, PT Astra Agro Lestari, owned by Indonesia's giant auto maker 
Astra International, is the country's largest crude palm oil producer. 
Founded by Suharto associate and former trade minister Bob Hasan, the 
company controls some 205,000 hectares of plantation area in Sumatra, 
Kalimantan and Sulawesi provinces. Hasan was convicted on corruption charges 
in February 2001 for causing the Indonesian government to lose $244 million 
in a fraudulent forest-mapping project. He was released on parole in 
February 2004.

Although criticized for their past cozy relations with senior politicians, 
Indonesia's emerging biofuel tycoons are almost universally taking their 
corporate cues from the government. The chairman of the government's biofuel 
development committee, Alhilal Hamdi, says current planning envisages 
production of about 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent in biofuel per day by 
2010.

Towards that end, the government has ordered provincial governments to 
simplify arrangements for land-use permits, urged the Agriculture Ministry 
to encourage more raw material production, goaded the Industry Ministry to 
simplify plant-licensing procedures and passed a new investment law that 
gives foreigners control over land for as long as 90 years.

Most of the new land to be made available by the government will be used to 
nurture palm oil, the government's most favored basic feedstock for 
biodiesel. Palm oil production hit 16 million tonnes last year, with about 
60% of that total exported both as finished product known as RBD palm olein 
and crude palm oil. Total output is expected to grow by 500,000 tons to 
750,000 tons a year for the foreseeable future as more acreage comes on 
stream.

One obvious controversial aspect of the master plan is the need for vast new 
land banks for plantation expansion, which some environmental groups say is 
accelerating already rapid deforestation. Indonesia currently has an 
estimated 5.5 million hectares of palm oil plantations, and the government 
now plans to more than double the total area under cultivation through the 
development of another 6.1 million hectares in Kalimantan, Papua and other 
provinces.

Currently, decisions on the maximum and minimum area to be used for palm oil 
and other commercial crop plantations are in the hands of the minister of 
agriculture. Plantation companies are licensed by local administrations in 
the respective provinces, which officially dispense 35-year renewable 
concessions based on the availability of land, population density and other 
factors.

Environmentalists say the expansion of oil palm plantations continues to 
come at the expense of natural forests rather than the conversion of already 
denuded land because of the better soil conditions fresh-cut forest lands 
provide. The annual forest fires that rage through Indonesia and frequently 
smother neighboring countries in smog are started mainly by palm growers to 
clear land for new planting.

More significantly, perhaps, the biofuel industry's economics are less than 
clearcut. Energy analysts note that biofuel projects around the world - even 
those benefiting from fat government subsidies - would be uncompetitive 
should crude oil prices fall to about $50 per barrel. Energy consultant Rudy 
Salim told Asia Times Online that any incentive for making and selling 
biodiesel produced with Indonesian palm oil will essentially disappear when 
crude palm oil prices reach levels above $650 per tonne.

He emphasizes that biodiesel is in any case never going to be more than a 
"drop in the ocean" in terms of overall supply compared to fossil fuel-based 
diesel. He figures that based on an average price of crude palm oil under 
$500 per tonne, the break-even point for palm oil versus crude oil would be 
$40 per barrel of oil. Crude prices now hover around $62 a barrel, while 
commodity analysts expect palm oil will average $564 a tonne this year 
compared to between $400 and $500 last year.

It's not only industry analysts who are raising red flags. United Nations 
environment program executive director Achim Steiner last month warned 
attendees at a global business summit for the environment in Singapore that 
businesses run the risk of a public backlash if the globally in vogue green 
business model is hijacked by industries who engage in environmentally 
destructive practices. That may have been a veiled reference to the 
personalities leading Indonesia's biofuel development.

Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has 
been in Indonesia for more than 20 years, mostly in journalism and editorial 
positions. He specializes in Indonesian political, business and economic 
analysis, and hosts a weekly television political talk show, Face to Face, 
broadcast on two Indonesia-based satellite channels. He can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IE22Ae02.html

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