The Sun (Malaysia)

Coal buyers spooked by Indonesia’s new shipping rules

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JAKARTA: Buyers of Indonesian coal are holding back orders of the fuel after the government issued new shipping rules for coal and crude palm oil that would restrict exports to Indonesian vessels, an industry associatio­n said yesterday.

Jakarta issued rules in October requiring coal and palm oil exporters to use Indonesian-flagged vessels and Indonesian insurance companies, to boost the role of the archipelag­o’s shipping industry in its export market.

However, guidelines on implementi­ng the rules and possible exemptions have not been released, raising concerns among shippers in Indonesia, the world’s top thermal coal exporter and palm oil producer.

The regulation will take effect at the end of April.

“There was some informatio­n, several potential buyers from abroad put on hold making any new contracts,” Hendra Sinadia, executive director of the Indonesia Coal Mining Associatio­n, told reporters.

Describing the new rules as “dangerous”, Sinadia said they could affect export volumes and state revenues if shipping contracts had to be renegotiat­ed to shift to so-called cost, insurance and freight (CIF) contracts from free-on-board (FOB) contracts.

Under CIF, the seller is responsibl­e for the shipping arrangemen­ts and must buy insurance to protect the cargo against losses during the voyage. Under FOB, the buyer procures the vessel and is responsibl­e for all shipping costs.

The industry is worried that time is running out to make adjustment­s before the rules come into effect, Sinadia said, noting that it would be difficult to do so without the guidelines.

Indonesia Palm Oil Associatio­n secretary-general Togar Sitanggang said in an interview on Jan 24 that there were several problems with the new rules, noting there were not enough Indonesian-flagged food-grade tankers, and that Indonesian insurers may lack capacity.

“If we’re selling CPO (crude palm oil), free-on-board at Belawan port, does this mean our buyer has to use Indonesian vessel? That is ridiculous.”

The palm oil industry is awaiting guidance on when foreign vessels can be used if local vessels are unavailabl­e, he said.

According to Oke Nurwan, directorge­neral of foreign trade at the Ministry of Trade, while most domestic shipping uses Indonesian-flagged vessels very little is exported on Indonesian ships.

“It can’t be like that any more,” Nurwan said on Jan 25, adding that the government wanted the domestic shipping sector to compete more with multinatio­nals.

“If (the government) didn’t intervene there would be no trigger, so we made it mandatory,” he said. – Reuters

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