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Indonesian coal miners seek grace period for adjustment to new pricing system

Indonesian coal miners seek grace period for adjustment to new pricing system

A senior official stated on Wednesday that the Indonesia Coal Miners Association is asking for a grace period of six months to allow them to adjust to the new pricing system introduced this month. They also asked the government to reevaluate its policy.

As a result of the new system, which is based on coal prices set by government (HBA), rates are now higher than market levels. This has caused some international buyers not to be interested in buying.

"Our association requested a grace period." Gita Mahyarani told APBI's acting executive director that convincing buyers was not an easy task.

A coal ministry official who oversees mining did not respond to requests for comment.

Indonesia, the top thermal coal exporter in the world, started using HBA prices on March 1, to calculate a price floor for transactions, as it wanted to gain more control over its commodities' price.

The HBA is calculated based on the latest prices reported to the government by coal miner for royalty fees. Indonesia set prices ranging from $34.16 to $128.24 a metric ton for the first half March, depending on calorific quality.

Previously, buyers of Indonesian coal used the Indonesia Coal Price Index weekly price as a standard for their transactions. HBA prices had only been used to calculate royalties.

A mining ministry official told a group of journalists last week that exporters can honour the prices in long-term contracts they have with buyers. However, the government expects them to adjust their prices if their contracts permit it.

The APBI stated that the new regulation does not exempt existing contracts from being implemented. Miners are renegotiating their prices with the buyers.

Gita said that some buyers refused to transact if prices had to be changed because they were not in line with their contracts.

(source: Reuters)