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Indonesia removes the requirement for benchmark prices to be used in mineral and coal sales

Indonesia removes the requirement for benchmark prices to be used in mineral and coal sales

A mining ministry order reviewed on Monday revealed that Indonesia has removed the requirement for minerals and coal sales to be priced at government benchmark prices.

The decree, which was issued earlier this month by the government, allowed miners the option to sell coal and minerals below benchmark prices set by the government, but the production levies, and taxes resulting from these transactions, would be based upon the benchmark prices.

Jakarta mandated the use of benchmark prices for coal transactions as of March 1. The intention was to have a greater control over the value domestic and international transactions of the fuel commodity. The price was already used to calculate royalty payments before that.

Both buyers and sellers preferred the Indonesian Coal Index for pricing shipments, because it is opaque, less often updated, and more expensive.

Indonesia also publishes benchmark prices for nickel, copper, tin and cobalt, among other things.

Indonesia exported 238 millions tons of thermal coal during the first half of 2014, an increase of 20% from a previous year. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey; Bernadette Christopher)

(source: Reuters)