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Indonesia: Incentives and Trade Tariffs to Boost Renewable Energy Investment

Jakarta Globe reports that Indonesia’s Finance Ministry announced late on Friday that it was providing incentives to boost investment in renewable energy, such as geothermal, solar and biofuels, in an effort to cut reliance on fossil fuels.

The ministerial decree includes a 5 percent tax cut over six years for renewable energy producers as well as exemptions from value-added tax and import duties on equipment. Another provision allows investors to use accelerated depreciation and amortization on assets to reduce taxable income.

Ministry spokesman, Harry Z. Soeratin, said in a statement:

The government aims to reduce dependency on non-renewable energy and to ensure availability of sustainable energy sources by attracting investment.

Paulus Tjakrawan, secretary general of the Indonesian Biofuel Producers Association (APROBI), applauded the incentives:

Indonesia has joined the rest of the world by applying regulations [to develop renewable energy]. The government is heading in the right direction….

It’s hard for biofuels to compete with fossil fuels prices without incentives, even though biofuel is subsidized. Biofuel producers have to sell their products cheaper than the production cost…

The government needs to promote the importance of biofuels. It may be more expensive, but in the long term it’s better for the environment.

Paulus also pointed out that land issues needing inter-ministry coordination to resolve are slowing the development of renewable energy in Indonesia:

Land sustainability has been the main debate in biofuel production. Several geothermal energy sources are located in protected forests. These are also important problems.

Indonesia was at one time heralded as the the future “Middle East of biofuel.” Raw material was abundant and the nation’s basic crops were the very building blocks to a thriving biofuel industry.

In 2009, Indonesia fell short of its biofuels target as producers halted operations because of the surging price of crude palm oil, the main raw material for biofuels in Indonesia. Total biofuel production was just 104,100 kiloliters in 2009, a 96 percent fall from the 2.56 million kiloliters produced in the previous year, according to the Energy Ministry. In March, the government doubled the biofuel subsidy from Rp 1,000 to Rp 2,000 a liter.

More on Indonesia’s renewable energy incentives.

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