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Indonesia
This Week in AsiaEconomics

How Indonesia’s coal policies left its own citizens in the dark

Hours-long blackouts since last week have disrupted the lives and businesses of millions of subscribers of state-owned utility firm PLN in Java

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Barges are loaded with coal on the Mahakam River in Samarinda, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, in 2022. Photo: AP
Resty Woro Yuniar
A wave of power outages across Indonesia’s Java island has left millions of residents and business owners in the dark, igniting public fury and raising questions as to how the world’s largest coal exporter is failing to keep its own lights on.

The answer, analysts say, lies less in a coal shortage than in the rules and incentives governing who gets to buy it, at what price and when.

Hours-long blackouts since last week have disrupted the lives and businesses of millions of subscribers of Indonesia’s state-owned utility firm PLN in Java, the centre of the US$1.5 trillion economy.

PLN attributed these outages to technical problems at two large power plants on the island operated by independent producers.

“[The two plants] were forced [offline] to disconnect from the Java electricity system,” PLN President Director Darmawan Prasodjo told reporters on June 19. He said PLN was facing a coal supply gap, especially for the medium-ranked coal used by its power plants.

According to the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, coal accounted for 64.87 per cent of Indonesia’s total electricity generation as of April.

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