http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HG22Ae01.html


Jul 22, 2006 
  
Politics and business mix in Indonesia
By Bill Guerin 


JAKARTA - On taking office, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
advised his officials to divest their personal business interests to avoid any 
allegations of conflict of interest hounding his reform-oriented government. 

Nearly two years into his term, that call hasn't been universally heeded, and 
the growing nexus of public and private interests is starting to win his 
administration unfavorable comparisons to former president Suharto's New Order 
government, where business and politics openly and often mixed to corrupt 
effect. 

Nowhere is Yudhoyono's reform discrepancy more apparent than with the publicly 
listed conglomerate PT Bakrie & Brothers, which currently has a market 
capitalization of about US$500 million and



is 80% owned by the family of Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare 
Aburizal Bakrie, a holdover tycoon from the Suharto era. 

The company accumulated more than $1 billion in debts at the height of the 
1997-98 Asian financial crisis, but the minister since has returned to the top 
echelon of Indonesia's richest people. Forbes magazine reckoned Bakrie was 
worth an estimated $735 million in 2004, making him the fourth-wealthiest 
person in the country after the three tobacco barons who owned cigarette makers 
Gudang Garam, Djarum Group and Sampoerna. 

Bakrie's businesses were still running in the red that year, nursing high debt 
loads left over from financial crisis and generating total losses of about 
Rp200 billion ($21.9 million). After Yudhoyono's first full year in office in 
2005, Bakrie dramatically returned to the black, generating positive net 
earnings and profits of Rp267 billion and Rp223 billion, respectively. And 
industry analysts predict that Bakrie's profits will soar this year. 

Back in business
Nowadays, the diversified Bakrie group businesses are locked into several 
government projects and there are apparently many more in the pipeline. This 
week the government's Downstream Oil and Gas Regulatory Body, BPH Migas, 
announced it had picked Bakrie Pipe Industries as its preferred bidder to build 
a controversial new $1.26 billion gas pipeline connecting Java and Kalimantan, 
the Indonesian portion of Borneo island. 

Bakrie championed the 1,219-kilometer East Kalimantan-Java gas pipeline, part 
of the Trans-ASEAN Gas Pipeline (TAGP) project, in his former government 
capacity as coordinating minister for the economy. He is on record as saying 
the government could appoint the contractor of the project, which was later won 
by his family business, without competitive bidding. 

State-owned gas transmission and distribution company PT Perusahaan Gas Negara 
(PGN) - which had teamed up with the China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC, 
that country's largest offshore oil producer) and landed funding from the World 
Bank and the Asian Development Bank - has subsequently claimed that its bid had 
been leaked, although not pointing the finger at any specific competitor. 

The deal has nonetheless gone through, and Bakrie is now negotiating with 
Kalimantan gas producers to secure supplies for the pipeline project, which the 
company expects to finish by 2009, according to Bobby Gafur Umar, Bakrie's 
president. The pipeline is expected to carry 1 billion cubic feet of natural 
gas per day from gas fields in East Kalimantan to users in Central Java by 
2009. Umar told reporters on Tuesday, "I'm sure the government will go all out 
to see this project gets completed." 

Those estimates are highly controversial, however. Some industry analysts say 
the level of gas reserves in East Kalimantan are not sufficient for the 
project's scope and could quickly represent a conflict with Indonesia's 
liquefied natural gas (LNG) contractual export commitments to major customers 
in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. 

Indonesia has in recent years been the world's largest LNG exporter, but the 
government is now considering importing the fuel to help meet its ballooning 
domestic energy demand. A recent government study shows it may cost Indonesia 
as much as Rp18 trillion a year in lost gas-export revenues to divert the gas 
for domestic purposes from gas-rich Kalimantan - raising big cost-benefit 
questions that some industry analysts contend have not been properly analyzed. 

Shipping gas to Java, industry experts say, would be far more economical. LNG 
production at the Bontang plant in Kalimantan could fall to nearly half its 
current volume from 2009-10 when the new pipeline comes online, the same 
experts say. Bontang is already struggling to meet annual production 
commitments because of a shortfall in gas supplies from increasingly spent gas 
fields operated by Total, Chevron and Vico Indonesia. 

With global oil prices soaring, the government's current push to switch to 
non-petroleum fuels to lower dependence on oil arguably makes good policy 
sense. At the same time, it will clearly benefit energy conglomerates such as 
PT Bakrie & Brothers as national power stations are converted to use more 
natural gas or coal and biofuel is given government priority over fossil fuel 
usage. 

Bakrie, 59, who was chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce, Trade and 
Industry for 10 years until 2004, bats back any criticism of conflict of 
interest and that certain government policies favor his family's private 
concerns over national interests. He frequently maintains that he no longer has 
any management role or formal position in his family-run company. 

Moreover, all government decisions for the energy sector, he insists, are made 
collectively. Bakrie admits he pressed for the controversial Kalimantan-Java 
pipeline project, but notes that "among 18 factories producing pipes, one of 
them is the Bakrie Group. That can't be helped." 

Riches to rags to riches
Achmad Bakrie founded Bakrie & Brothers in 1942 as a general merchant and 
trading company. His eldest son, Aburizal Bakrie, took control of the family 
business upon his death in 1988, and along with his two brothers, Nirwan and 
Indra, the second generation of entrepreneurs rapidly expanded into areas as 
diverse as steel-pipe manufacturing, telecommunications, rubber and oil-palm 
plantations, petrochemicals, property, banking, insurance, infrastructure, 
mining, and media. By the 1990s, an era when Indonesia was heralded by the 
World Bank as a "miracle" economy, Bakrie & Brothers was one of the country's 
leading conglomerates. 

Then the Asian financial crisis hit. By December 1999, Bakrie's three main 
holding companies owed Rp4.3 trillion to the government-run Indonesian Bank 
Restructuring Agency, making it IBRA's fourth-largest debtor. Combined with the 
debts it owed to hundreds of different foreign creditors, its total debts 
peaked at about Rp10 trillion. 

The debt-restructuring agreement the family signed with IBRA in November 2001 
left the Bakries with a mere 2.92% shareholding in what had been the largest 
conglomerate in Indonesia with about $5 billion in net assets and 71 different 
subsidiaries. About 95% of the companies' shares were transferred to creditors 
in debt-for-equity swaps, while the remaining 2.08% of the company belonged to 
the public. 

The Bakrie family's fortunes reversed again beginning in 2003, when the assets 
of one of the world's biggest thermal coal mines, PT Kaltim Prima Coal, were 
scooped up by the family soon after the government started negotiations with 
global mining giants BP and Rio Tinto, which were forced to sell their 
concessions to resources under new nationalistic mining laws. 

Bakrie-affiliated PT Bumi Resources said it had received loans amounting to 
$404.5 million from international lenders to help finance the $500 million 
acquisition. Singapore's United Overseas Bank and Credit Suisse First Boston 
provided a combined $318 million, according to company statements. Bumi already 
owned PT Arutmin Indonesia, another big coal producer it had bought in 2001 
from BHP Biliton Australia for $180 million in another government-forced sale. 
Together, these two mines accounted for nearly 40% of Indonesia's total coal 
exports last year. 

Bumi, currently with a market capitalization of $1.76 billion, announced in 
March it would offload both mines to a consortium of local companies led by 
Jakarta-based investment bank Renaissance Capital for $3.2 billion, thus giving 
the company an apparent windfall profit of more than $2.5 billion. 

Those earnings will provide capital to finance Bakrie's new plans to invest 
heavily in Indonesia's underdeveloped oil-and-gas sector. With the 
industrialization of China and India pushing up demand for oil and gas to 
unprecedented levels, and the upward impact the conflict in the Middle East has 
had on crude prices, Bakrie has its eye on plumbing Indonesia's under-exploited 
fuel reserves to cash in on spiraling global fuel prices. 

Ken Farrell, Bumi's director of operations, reportedly described the 
opportunity as too good to miss. "After we've paid for a dividend and a share 
buyback, we will have - including debt - up to $5.5 billion in the war chest." 
Bumi is also in the process of taking over its sister company, PT Energi Mega 
Persada Tbk, a provider, developer and explorer in the upstream oil and gas 
business with a market value of about $841.7 million. 

Big government deals 
Bumi can use the cash from its divestment in coal-mining assets to bankroll 
Energi's mostly undeveloped oil and gas blocks and also make further 
acquisitions. Energi bought five oil and gas blocks in Indonesia late last 
year. If, as expected, the merger goes through, it will create a national 
energy champion that has the potential to be the biggest oil-and-gas concern in 
the Asia-Pacific region, with a market value of some $2.8 billion based on 
current prices. 

Next year Energi will begin supplying between 120 million and 130 million cubic 
feet of gas per day to several electricity-generating power plants in East 
Java. The contract runs for 15 years and is worth an estimated $3 billion. It 
will also supply gas to PGN, state oil-and-gas company Pertamina, and PT 
Petrokimia Gresik. 

The first phase of Energi's 100%-owned Terang-Sirasun-Batur field development 
off Java is targeting a production startup by 2008 and will cost at least $275 
million. Bumi plans to issue 14.4 billion new shares to finance the 
acquisition, while each Energi shareholder will have the right to convert their 
shares to Bumi on a 1:1 basis. The domestic and foreign minority shareholders 
of both companies will vote on the merger plan at the end of July and the deal 
is due for completion on August 9. 

Investor confidence in Energi has recently been hit to a degree by a drilling 
accident at one of its fields in Java, alleged to have been caused by 
subsidiary Lapindo Brantas. Energi says the damages are manageable and are 
partly covered by insurance, but traders believe the ecological disaster could 
result in huge damages and compensation payouts. 

The government has recently announced an ambitious bio-energy program that will 
include a massive Rp200 trillion investment over the next five years to promote 
the use of alternative fuels such as bio-diesel and ethanol made from palm oil, 
cassava, jatropha and sugarcane. Toward that end, state planners hope to 
develop another 3 million hectares of plantations over the next five years to 
help meet biofuel demand. 

In line with that policy, PT Bakrie Sumatera Plantations, which generates about 
33% of Bakrie's total revenues, plans to expand by 2008 its oil-palm 
plantations in Sumatra and Kalimantan to 40,000 hectares. The company also 
holds a 70% stake in Bakrie Rekin Bio-Energy, a joint venture with state-owned 
contractor Rekayasa Industri, which was established to construct a big new 
bio-diesel plant early next year. 

The $25 million bio-diesel factory is expected to come onstream in mid-2008, 
and will have an initial capacity of 60,000-100,000 tons of bio-diesel. Bakrie 
will provide the raw materials needed, including crude palm oil and other 
feedstock, while Rekayasa Industri would provide engineering and construction 
expertise. 

The bigger Bakrie money, however, will come from old-fashioned infrastructure. 
About 55% of Bakrie's revenues come from the infrastructure sector, which is 
highly dependent on government contracts and licenses for its livelihood. 
Bakrie has recently won several big-ticket infrastructure projects, including a 
$66 million gas pipeline connecting Java to Sumatra and a gas-distribution 
project to West Java worth $37 million. 

Bakrie Power, meanwhile, is working with China-owned Chengda Engineering Corp 
and the Bank of China to resurrect the once-stalled Tanjung Jati project, a 
steam-powered 1,320-megawatt electricity-generating plant project in Cilacap, 
Central Java - the same area that was hit by Monday's tsunami. The project is 
worth an estimated $1.1 billion and will receive funding from the Bank of 
China. 

The Bakrie subsidiary has also set aside $1.7 billion to build a 1,320MW 
coal-powered electricity plant with the help of state electricity firm PT 
Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) and an integrated steel factory. The $1.4 
billion power project will begin next year and is estimated to take about three 
years to complete. The $300 million integrated steel factory, meanwhile, is 
likely to be built in West Java and have an annual production capacity of 1 
million tons. 

Together with Indian firm Welspun Gujarat Stahl Rohren Ltd, PT South East Asia 
Pipe Industries (Seapi), a Bakrie subsidiary, won a tender to supply a 
168.6-kilometer undersea gas pipeline for PGN. The pipeline will stretch from 
Maringgai harbor in Lampung, South Sumatra, to the Bekasi Estuary in West Java. 
Seapi won $65.8 million of the project's total $84.2 value. 

Never been burned 
The Bakrie Group has never in its long history been linked to any scandal or 
government corruption, despite perennial concerns about possible conflict of 
interest with the family's strong political connections. Unlike most developed 
countries and some regional neighbors such as Thailand, Indonesia has no legal 
regulations barring government officials from having business interests while 
they hold public office. 

Anung Karyadi, a staffer with global corruption watchdog Transparency 
International's Indonesian affiliate, contends that the Indonesian government 
should establish clear regulations on how family members and close associates 
of government officials conduct their business. 

The government has long planned to set up an independent national public 
procurement office to reform the procurement system, but those plans are still 
on the drawing board. There have notably been few, if any, government moves 
toward developing a national competitiveness framework aimed at breaking up big 
business monopolies and promoting more growth-promoting entrepreneurialism. 

Some analysts argue that the growing mix of business and politics under 
Yudhoyono's administration looks familiar to those who remember Suharto's 
government. Then, Suharto's six children and a handful of his favored business 
associates controlled large swaths of the Indonesian economy. And, they note, 
the Bakrie family business was then, and is today, Indonesia's top 
conglomerate. 

Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has 
worked in Indonesia for 20 years, mostly in journalism and editorial positions. 
He has been published by the BBC on East Timor and specializes in 
business/economic and political analysis related to Indonesia. He can be 
reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
about sales, syndication and republishing .)

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