
Indonesia will soon announce policy to stop raw copper exports

Indonesian President Joko Widodo gave a keynote address at the Mandiri Investment Forum 2023, at the Fairmont Hotel Ballroom, Jakarta, Wednesday (Feb 1, 2023), during which he said he will soon announce a policy to stop raw copper exports. (The Indonesian Cabinet Secretariat)
The decision to stop raw copper exports was made based on the progress of smelter constructions in Gresik district, East Java province, and West Nusa Tenggara province, which has reached more than 50 percent.
Jakarta (Indonesia Window) – Indonesian President Joko Widodo has said that he will soon announce a policy to stop raw copper exports, following a similar one that has been in effect for nickel and that for bauxite would take effect by next June.The head of state made the remarks at the Mandiri Investment Forum 2023, at the Ballroom of the Fairmont Hotel in Jakarta on Wednesday (Feb. 1), according to the Indonesian Cabinet Secretariat in its written statement as quoted by Indonesia Window on Thursday.“(The exports) of nickel have stopped. I said again last December that (exports of raw) bauxite will stop in June. I will soon announce again that raw copper exports will stop this year," the president said.The head of state revealed that the decision to stop raw copper exports was based on the progress of smelter constructions in Gresik district, East Java province and West Nusa Tenggara province, which has reached more than 50 percent."I checked yesterday that the constructions of the Freeport smelter and the smelter in West Nusa Tenggara have been more than 50 percent finished. The Freeport (smelter) is already 51 percent finished. So, we dare to stop it," he said.The president added that Indonesia has now become the majority shareholder of PT Freeport Indonesia, a company engaged in the exploration, mining, processing and marketing of copper, gold and silver concentrates in the highlands of Tembagapura, Mimika, Central Papua.The president emphasized that Indonesia would continue its mining downstream policy despite facing lawsuits from other countries.The downstream policy would make Indonesia jump from a developing to developed country, he added, hoping that consistency in implementing downstream policies would increase Indonesia's per capita income."We hope that in 2045, our gross domestic product (GDP) would be at my estimate of 9-11 trillion U.S. dollars. If we are consistent, our per capita income would be at 21-29 thousand dollars, so we would be a developed country," he explained.Previously, the president said that the government was designing a grand strategy for Indonesia to make it leapfrog into a developed country and not get stuck in a trap of a middle-income country.That big strategy is to create an electric car and electric vehicle (EV) battery ecosystem so that other countries would have dependence on Indonesia, the president said at the Commemoration of the 8th Anniversary of the Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI) in Jakarta, Tuesday (31 /1).Reporting by Indonesia WindowBagikan

Komentar
Berita Terkait

News Focus - Expert: Hatred of Islam like tides of sea
Indonesia
•
20 Feb 2023

Opinion – Serving as ‘Commander of Diplomacy' in international arena
Indonesia
•
27 Jan 2024

Indonesia's digital economy in 2030 to reach 210-360 billion USD
Indonesia
•
01 Aug 2024

Indonesian president receives Japanese Special Envoy in Jakarta
Indonesia
•
05 May 2025


Berita Terbaru

Interview - Advancing Water Resilience and Energy Transition Through Global Partnership
Indonesia
•
12 Jun 2026

UAE ambassador says his country reaches 1 bln people through global aid efforts
Indonesia
•
11 Jun 2026

Indonesia-UAE partnership built on empowerment, not aid, UAE ambassador says
Indonesia
•
11 Jun 2026

Why UAE ambassador believes Indonesian youth can shape the future
Indonesia
•
11 Jun 2026
