Updated
Updated · bworldonline.com · Jun 14
Chinese Investors Shun Philippine Nickel as Indonesia Tightens Taxes and Quotas
Updated
Updated · bworldonline.com · Jun 14

Chinese Investors Shun Philippine Nickel as Indonesia Tightens Taxes and Quotas

2 articles · Updated · bworldonline.com · Jun 14

Summary

  • Philippine nickel producers said Chinese investors are steering away from the country despite seeking alternatives to Indonesia, citing uncertainty in China-Philippines ties and West Philippine Sea tensions.
  • PNIA said geopolitics is only part of the hesitation: investors also worry about regulatory predictability, permit timelines, infrastructure gaps and high energy costs that can delay or shrink projects.
  • Indonesia’s tougher nickel regime — higher taxes, mining quotas and a revised mineral benchmark pricing system — has pushed Chinese groups including Tsingshan and Lygend to look instead at Madagascar, New Caledonia and Tanzania.
  • DMCI Mining said companies weigh resource potential, project economics and long-term strategy, while PNIA argued the Philippines could still capture more critical-minerals investment by streamlining permits and improving policy certainty.

Insights

Will the Philippines' nickel rush repeat Indonesia's environmental crisis, or can it pioneer a greener model for mining?
Can the Philippines develop its vast nickel reserves without getting caught in the crossfire of the US-China rivalry?