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Indonesia will fine palm oil producers and miners $8.4 billion for forest encroachment

The Attorney General of Indonesia said that in 2026, it could collect $8.5 billion in fines from palm oil companies as well as illegal miners in forests.

The forestry taskforce of President Prabowo, which is made up from military personnel, police, prosecutors, and government officials, cracked down this year on a massive scale on mines and plantations in areas that authorities claim were supposed to have been forest.

Analysts predict that the military-backed campaign, combined with Indonesia's ambitious "biodiesel" plans, could increase global prices even further by disrupting production.

Sanitiar?General Sanitiar?Burhanuddin said, at a ceremony held in front of tall piles of red Rupiah notes, that the task force had already taken over illegal mines and plantations covering 4.1 million hectares (9.8 millions acres), an area roughly the same size as the Netherlands.

Burhanuddin handed over to the Finance Minister the 2.34 trillion Rupiah ($139.70 million) in fines that the task force collected against 20 palm oil companies, and one nickel mining company.

Burhanuddin stated that there was a potential revenue from fines imposed on palm oil plantations, and mining within forest areas. The fines for palm oil are 109.6 trillion Rupiah, or $6.54 billion, and for mining, 32.63 trillion Rupiah, or $1.95 billion.

He did not mention any companies.

Burhanuddin transferred 240,500 acres of plantations, as well, to the state-owned firm Agrinas Palma Nusantara. This company was established in early 2025. Agrinas has now grown to a total of 1.7 million hectares. This makes it the largest palm oil producer in the world.

At the ceremony Prabowo praised "the task force" and attacked those who he claimed had "tried to drain Indonesia dry, as well as foreign powers undermining his Government."

He said: "Even though it is a difficult journey, I know that in 2026, we will be taking even bolder measures... We'll save the wealth of this nation without hesitation."

The world's largest exporter of palm, thermal coal and nickel is Indonesia. $1 = 16,750,0000 rupiah (Reporting and editing by David Stanway; Gayatri Suryo)

(source: Reuters)