Regulatory standoff could close Indonesia’s
golden mine
US
mining giant Freeport McMoRan has challenged government mandated divestment and
export bans. The fate of its Grasberg mine lies in the balance
Energy
and Mineral Resources Minister Ignasius Jonan said it repeatedly at a recent
briefing with foreign reporters on the Indonesian government’s recent changes
to mining regulations: “What we are trying to do is add value to our minerals
for the benefit of the people of Indonesia. The goal of the government is to
process all our natural resources.”
Indonesia’s
controversial value-added mineral policy, born with the passage of the 2009
Mining Law and now cemented in place by smelter requirements and export
restrictions, is heartfelt and in many ways understandable from an economic
perspective.
But the
refusal of President Joko Widodo’s administration to bend on new divestment
rules has many analysts wondering whether it spells the beginning of the end
for US copper and gold mining giant Freeport McMoRan Inc’s nearly five-decade
association with Indonesia.
With
copper at least, the Indonesian government’s policy has never made a lot of
sense given the fact that the 300,000-ton Mitsubishi-run smelter in Gresik,
East Java, already provides enough refined copper to meet all of Indonesia’s
needs and could supply most of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations as
well.
Jonan and
deputy minister Archandra Tahar lapse into silence when it is pointed out by
reporters that while the smelter has been in operation for two decades, in its
location north of the port city of Surabaya, no ancillary industries have
developed around it.
Nor can
either explain why the country’s two biggest miners, Freeport and PT Amann
Mineral Nusa Tenggara, are required by the government to build new smelters to
refine their remaining concentrate into cathodes when the process only adds
4%-5% to copper’s value – compared with 40% for nickel.
New
mining regulations issued on January 12 also dictate that Freeport can only
continue exporting concentrate if it converts its current Contract of Work into
a special business license, under which it must divest 51% of its shares to
local interests within 10 years.
That
alone is a likely deal-breaker. Freeport’s 1991 contract does in fact establish
a timetable under which the company should have handed over a 51% stake to
Indonesian entities by 2011. But the provision was negated by a subsequent 1994
regulation allowing foreign invested firms to retain a controlling interest.
Freeport
now says it won’t go beyond divesting a further 20.64%, on top of the 9.36%
currently held by the government. Until that issue and an agreement to a
contract extension beyond the current expiry date of 2021 are resolved, exports
from its Grasberg mine in remote Papua province will remain suspended.
When a
total ban on concentrate exports was introduced in January 2014, Freeport’s
initial reluctance to build a US$2.7 billion smelter as a condition for having
the suspension lifted cost Indonesia more than US$900 million in lost tax and
other revenue.
This
time, the government is ready to issue a six-month temporary export permit but
officials say it will depend on whether Freeport is prepared to sign a letter agreeing
to the change to a special license.
Freeport
is working on the bottom of its two-kilometer-wide pit in Papua province, the
sweetest spot of all for rich copper and gold grades, as it undergoes a US$17.2
billion conversion to a completely underground mine, which was originally timed
for this year.
That
likely won’t happen until the two sides can find a way around the current
impasse. Since January 12, Freeport has been forced to scale back its operation
to a point where it is only producing enough concentrate for the Gresik smelter
and may eventually have to lay off as many as 9,000 workers.
Beyond a
temporary export permit, the situation does not look hopeful. The government’s
take-it-or-leave-it attitude suggests it is prepared to wait out the company,
perhaps as far as 2021, when, as one senior economic minister said in an
interview “the mine will be ours.”
Back in
the mid-1990s, there were 150 junior mining companies in Indonesia. Today there
are just five, with a few Indonesian-owned. The government’s onerous new
processing rules give them little hope of progressing past the discovery phase
of a new mining project or interesting a larger company to do so.
Compare
that to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a country still in the throes of
civil war, much less prospective and with a much smaller pool of skilled labor,
where 19 major mining companies are now actively exploring for copper and other
minerals.
Another
point of contention is international arbitration, which is provided for in Freeport’s
current contract but not in the new licenses. That would leave the company with
no legal recourse if Jakarta decides not to renew its contract in five years’
time.
The
company is now trying to negotiate a separate stabilization agreement, to be signed
at the same time as the conversion to the license regime, which would ensure
the current provisions in the COW – including arbitration – remain in effect.
The 1991
contract says Freeport is entitled to apply for two successive 10-year
extensions, adding that the government should not “unreasonably withhold or
delay such approval” – a phrase that would likely be a central debating point
at any arbitration hearing.
While
company lawyers are now studying the arbitration option, it is probably the
last thing Freeport wants to do considering it would irreversibly destroy any
remaining goodwill between the company and government.
The
situation could get heated fast. The Widodo government appears to be in no mood
to make concessions on its new regulatory framework. That attitude is likely to
harden the closer Indonesia gets to general elections in 2019, where Widodo is
expected to run for re-election.
Yielding
to a foreign mining company, particularly one regarded as Public Enemy No 1 in
some circles because of its past association with former president Suharto,
would be political suicide in a country where economic nationalism has never
been in such full flower.
Jonan’s
refrain about Indonesia taking greater control of its natural resources has
made it increasingly clear – if it was not before – that Freeport was
always going to be the test case and that for the government there will be no
retreat.
Freeport’s
position is hardening as well. Its largest individual shareholder, billionaire
investor Carl Icahn, who took an 8.5% stake in the company in August 2015, has
since presided over a major fire sale to reduce the firm’s US$20 billion debt
brought about by a mistimed diversification into oil and gas that cost
long-serving chairman James Robert Moffett his job.
Now a
special adviser US President Donald Trump on regulatory reform, Icahn has
reportedly been following events in Indonesia with close interest. According to
insiders, his patience – and that of fellow board members – is wearing thin.
When he
took Trump’s advisory job last December, Icahn told reporters: “It’s time to
break free of excessive regulation and let our entrepreneurs do what they do
best: create jobs and support communities.” He will not like what he sees in
Indonesia’s ever-changing regulatory jungle.
Indonesian
officials say they are prepared for the worst, including arbitration and the
potential closure of Freeport’s Grasberg mine. What is not so clear is whether
it can deal with the social unrest that will likely follow in Papua if tens of
thousands of miners are suddenly laid off as a result.
John
McBeth, a former correspondent with the Far Eastern Economic Review, is a
Jakarta-based columnist with over 45 years’ experience covering Southeast Asia.
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