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Indonesia wants coal miners who supply more of their output to the domestic market to increase their share

Local media reported that the Indonesian government would ask coal'miners with special contracts' to supply a greater portion of their production domestically, as they are expected to receive their 'full output quota request.

Kontan, citing a senior energy ministry official, reported that the government wanted 75 million metric tonnes of coal supplied to the state utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara in early 2026 from holders of the first-generation 'contract of works' deals, and state-controlled 'coal miner's. A contract of works is a long-term agreement between the government and miners that has specific rules. This includes taxes. Tri Winarno, an official at the Energy Ministry was quoted as saying that these miners will be granted their output quotas because of the importance they place on royalty payments.

The majority of coal?miners have switched over to newer mining permits which generally follow the law. Indonesia has a scheme that requires coal miners sell at least 25% of their production to the domestic market. Indonesia announced plans to reduce mining output quotas for many minerals this year to help support prices. In the past year, 32% (or 790 million tons) of the nation's coal production was sold on the domestic market. (Reporting and editing by John Mair; Fransiska Nanangoy)

(source: Reuters)