The
mineral export ban :
Natural
resource management forte?
Heru Pamungkas, Rangga D
Fadillah, Aditya Rakhman ; Heru
Pamungkas is a litigation attorney at Assegaf, Hamzah & Partners (AHP);
Rangga D. Fadillah is an analyst at BowerGroupAsia; Aditya Rakhman is a
consultant at the REDD+ Agency Indonesia
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JAKARTA
POST, 18 Juli 2014
In
early 2014, the Indonesian government released an energy and mineral
resources ministerial regulation that required holders of commercial mining
permits (IUP) and special mining licenses (IUPK) in metal production to
conduct a minimum amount of their processing and refining within the borders
of Indonesia. This move triggered an outcry, especially from extractive
industries.
It
was reported last week that PT Newmont Nusa Tenggara (NNT) has filed a
lawsuit against the government with the International Centre for the
Settlement of Investment Disputes (arbitration) in response to the emergence
of the regulation.
NNT
has stated that the regulation, which came into force on Jan. 12, 2014, has
caused its mining site in Batu Hijau to cease operations, inevitably
inflicting economic damage on NNT employees, contractors and other
stakeholders. NNT in its submission stated that the regulation was not
aligned with the contract of work and bilateral investment agreement between
Indonesia and the Netherlands (NNT’s major shareholder is an entity based on
Dutch laws).
In
spite of harsh reactions from the extractive industry, the underlying
question remains.
At
the very core of its systemic design and the implications that it brings, is
this regulatory approach strategic in approaching a better resource
management system?
One
can argue that the policy brings more harm than good or vice versa, but what
one cannot deny is that this approach provides the country with “better”,
although far from perfect, regulatory architecture to help the government in
managing its mineral resources. Poor management of natural resources,
particularly minerals, has inflicted tremendous economic loss in the form of
opportunity cost that is too apparent to ignore any longer.
Earlier
this year, the Finance Ministry’s tax director general, Fuad Rahmany,
revealed that the country lost approximately Rp 14.7 trillion (US$1.26
billion) per year due to illegal exports of minerals.
There
are around 1,000 illegal seaports operating across the archipelago that
facilitate these activities, including in Kalimantan, one of the country’s
richest natural resource producers.
A
major cause of the current turbulence has been the government’s
indecisiveness in implementing the 2009 law over the past few years.
The
seaports in question lack the necessary supervising and security details from
officers and officials, so the ports can easily be used by delinquent miners
to export mineral ores without paying taxes to the government.
If
regulatory frameworks can be prescribed that make life slightly harder for
the illegal exporters, the government will be able to tap into the lost
economic benefit. This is where the export ban (together with more rigid
licensing requirements) may serve that purpose.
With
the export ban, mining companies are obliged to process their raw minerals up
to a certain degree of purity inside the boundaries of the country. It is
essential to note that this does not imply that all mining companies should
build their own processing facilities or smelters; alternatively, they can
process their mineral ores through smelting companies or at other mining
companies’ smelters.
But
things are never that simple; new smelters will not be ready until as early
as 2017. A major cause of the current turbulence has been the government’s
indecisiveness in implementing the 2009 law on minerals and coal over the
past few years.
Thus,
companies are still allowed to export ores but must pay some amount of
duties, implemented as disincentives.
The
situation has raised concern that the high cost of operating businesses in
Indonesia will further reduce investors’ trust in Indonesia’s investment
climate in the mining sector.
However,
this is only a temporary effect. When the smelters are ready and the
government continues to facilitate the business through regulatory frameworks
with certainty and decisiveness in the coming two or three years, the
benefits of this policy will outweigh any discounts on Indonesia’s investment
climate initially.
And
therefore, despite the challenges, this policy is worth fighting for. In
light of achieving the desired effects laid out above, the ball is now in the
government’s court, because the authority to manage natural resources is
ultimately in the hands of the government, as mandated in the Constitution.
To
that end, the government enacted the 2009 Law on Mineral and Coal Mining,
which aims to manage mining activities that may well be a key contributor to
the economic development of the country.
Government
Regulation (PP) No. 23 of 2010, which was amended by PP No. 1 of 2014 as well
Ministerial Regulation (Permen) No. 1 of 2014, obliges mining companies to
revise their contract of works and Working Agreements (Perjanjian Karya),
which consequently requires the companies to refine mineral ores within
Indonesia at the latest by five years after the issuance of the regulation.
As
a consequence of the regulations, mining companies need to ensure the
availability of smelters to refine mineral ores that can be built by the
mining companies themselves and/or other mining companies. The system
requires mining companies to submit and apply for business licenses from the
government.
The
companies, however, should satisfy all of the conditions as set out in the
Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry’s Regulation No. 32 of 2013 before
obtaining a refining license that, among other things, includes providing a
Memorandum of Understanding on Sale and Purchase Material made between the
IUP holder and the company, as well as providing proof of the validity of the
IUP.
As
part of the architecture, the regulatory framework allows the government to
have expanded management.
As
laid out early in the article, the cost of not having a proper framework to
regulate natural resource management for this bustling archipelago is
astronomical.
This
situation can be reversed, and the government’s steps in early 2014 need to
be supported.
If
today it can tackle illegal mining, perhaps tomorrow it can raise Indonesia’s
bargaining position in negotiations.
The
prospects are excitingly promising. ●
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