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Indonesia amends its mining law to improve access and support processing

Indonesia amends its mining law to improve access and support processing

The Indonesian parliament passed on Tuesday a bill that will revise its mining law. It is intended to boost the development of domestic mining industries and regulate access for small business and religious groups.

The amendment aims to encourage smaller firms to participate in the mining sector and ensure that ore is available for processing industries. Indonesia, a country rich in resources, wants to develop its metals industry.

Indonesia is one of the world's largest coal exporters and also has deposits of tin and copper, as well as bauxite. The world's biggest source of nickel is in Indonesia.

The amended mining laws allows priority access to mining concessions for those companies who are building processing facilities. This is based on the size of the investment, value added and job creation.

Small- and medium-sized companies, as well as religious groups through an enterprise under their control, will be given priority access to some mining areas.

In the past, this priority access was only given to state-owned enterprises.

Prior to this, universities were included in the list of parties entitled to priority access.

Instead, priority will be given to certain government-controlled or private businesses to manage a mining area for the benefit of the universities, such as for research and scholarship funds.

After a vote in the plenary, Energy and Mineral Resources minister Bahlil lahadalia said that the amendment was in line with government aspirations to reform governance for mineral and coal mines.

The law revision also complied with a 2021 order from the Constitutional Court to revise certain articles related to mining, which were deemed unconstitutional by the court.

(source: Reuters)