The Borneo Post

Malaysia’s bauxite industry faces burn up

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KUALA LUMPUR: Already under fire for widespread environmen­tal damage, Malaysia's once lucrative bauxite mining industry is facing a likely death knell from neighbouri­ng Indonesia's move to allow a resumption of exports.

This time last year, Malaysia was the world's biggest supplier of the aluminum- making raw material to top buyer China, but its exports tumbled after government action aimed at reining in the little regulated industry.

The latest move could spell the end for a sector that only sprang to life in late 2014 after Indonesia banned ore exports, and illustrate­s the risks facing miners across Southeast Asia from increasing­ly uncertain government policy.

Copper giant FreeportMc­MoRan Inc warned last week it could slash output from Indonesia amid a long- running dispute with the government, while the Philippine­s has ordered the closure of more than half the country's mines on environmen­tal grounds.

“Policy risk is huge in mining right now,” said Daniel Morgan, mining analyst at UBS in Sydney. “In supplier policy, you've got changes to Indonesia's mining policy, the Philippine­s and Malaysia.”

A host of mining operations sprang up along Malaysia's bauxite-rich east coast to fill a supply gap after Indonesia in 2014 barred exports of mineral ores in a bid to push miners to build smelters.

In 2015, Malaysia shipped more than 20 million tonnes to China, well ahead of nearest rival Australia and up nearly 700 per cent on the previous year. In 2013, it shipped just 162,000 tonnes.

But the dramatic rise came at a cost as largely unregulate­d miners failed to secure stockpiles of bauxite. The run- off from monsoon rains turned rivers and coastal seas red, contaminat­ing water sources and leading to a public outcry.

The government imposed a mining moratorium in early 2016, and shipments to China from existing stockpiles fell to 165,587 tonnes in December, with little indication the government is set to change its mind.

Malaysia's natural resources and environmen­t ministry said any decision to lift the moratorium would be based on how well miners follow regulation­s to preserve the environmen­t rather than economic gain.

Recent rains in Kuantan have caused some bauxite runoffs from existing stockpiles, minister Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar told Reuters.

“The heavy rains proved that the mitigation was not adequate. Now by having this before me, I am not yet prepared to allow them to start the operations,” he said, declining further comment on the topic.

Indonesia introduced new rules last month that will allow exports of nickel ore and bauxite and concentrat­es of other minerals in a sweeping policy shift, but did not specify when it would resume exports.

The announceme­nt could be the final nail in the coffin for Malaysia's industry, as its miners expect China to switch to Indonesia's better quality and cheaper ore, due to lower production costs.

“Indonesian bauxite miners kept a lot of stockpiles ... They can sell cheap,” said a miner from local company based in Kuantan, a key bauxite mining area in the state of Pahang.

“If the volume coming out of Indonesia is over 10 million tonnes, Malaysia has to say goodbye.”

Unlike recent ructions in nickel supply from Indonesia and the Philippine­s that pushed up prices, Malaysia's near exit from bauxite has had little impact on the supply chain as new suppliers emerged, particular­ly in Guinea in West Africa.

“Some of these commoditie­s are pretty plentiful, like bauxite for instance,” noted UBS's Morgan. “When we talk to aluminum companies in China, we haven't detected that they're worried about a bauxite shortage.”

The greater effect may be on Malaysia's export-based economy where bauxite surged to become a key mineral shipped to China, its largest trading partner. At a bauxite price of US$50 a tonne, Malaysia's 2015 exports were worth over US$1 billion.

“There will be less export income,” said Ooi Kee Beng, deputy director of Singapore based research centre ISEASYusof Ishak Institute.

“The loss of jobs at a time when common people are facing economic difficulti­es will have political impact that is unwelcomed by the government.”

 ??  ?? The gate to a durian orchard overlookin­g land mined by bauxite mining companies, which was previously all durian orchards, is seen in Kuantan. — Reuters photo
The gate to a durian orchard overlookin­g land mined by bauxite mining companies, which was previously all durian orchards, is seen in Kuantan. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A host of mining operations sprang up along Malaysia’s bauxite-rich east coast to fill a supply gap after Indonesia in 2014 barred exports of mineral ores in a bid to push miners to build smelters. — Reuters photo
A host of mining operations sprang up along Malaysia’s bauxite-rich east coast to fill a supply gap after Indonesia in 2014 barred exports of mineral ores in a bid to push miners to build smelters. — Reuters photo

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