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Chinese firms warn that nickel quotas and tax increases in Indonesia will threaten investment

Chinese companies in Indonesia are calling for more business-friendly policy, warning that tighter nickel ore quotas and higher taxes, as well as a new pricing formula, are driving costs up, and threatening investments in the world's largest nickel producer.

China Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia, in a letter sent to President Prabowo, and copied to China's Embassy, said that Chinese firms were subjected to "excessively strict regulation and over-enforcement" and that authorities were allegedly corrupt and engaged in extortion.

Five sources who were familiar with the issue confirmed the letter. They requested anonymity as they weren't authorised to speak in public.

The complaint highlights tensions that exist between Jakarta's desire to extract more value out of its natural resources, and the Chinese capital which has driven Indonesia's rapid growth in global nickel supply.

The letter mentioned higher taxes and 'royalties', planned foreign exchange retention rules, stricter enforcement of forestry, work visa restrictions, and suspensions for major projects.

The strongest warning was directed at?nickel where Chinese firms dominate downstream after years of investing in smelters and stainless steel plants as well as battery-material projects.

The chamber reported that nickel ore mining quotas were drastically reduced in this year. For large mines, reductions exceeded 70%, and the total was 30 million metric tonnes.

The report also criticised Indonesia’s revised nickel ore price benchmark formula, known as HPM. It said the changes could have increased costs and undermined existing projects.

The government has decided to delay planned increases in mineral royalties and export duty while it develops what officials describe as a 'fairer formula' for the state and miner.

Prabowo, in a statement earlier on Wednesday said that many foreign investors complained Indonesia required too many licenses?and approvals were taking too long. He called for deregulation, to support investment.

The chamber failed to respond to a request for comments sent via email. Prabowo's spokesperson did not respond to a message sent via text requesting comment.

Tsingshan, Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt and Brunp are members of chamber boards that operate nickel plants in Indonesia. (Reported in Shanghai by Dylan Duan, Gayatri soroyo and Gibran Peshimam. Tom Daly and Christina Bernadette contributed additional reporting from Jakarta and London. Mark Potter (Editing)

(source: Reuters)