Updated
Updated · Foreign Policy · Jul 1
Indonesia Endures June Blackouts With Losses Up to $562 Million as Coal Mismanagement Bites
Updated
Updated · Foreign Policy · Jul 1

Indonesia Endures June Blackouts With Losses Up to $562 Million as Coal Mismanagement Bites

3 articles · Updated · Foreign Policy · Jul 1

Summary

  • Rolling blackouts spread across Java, Sumatra, Bali and Indonesian Borneo through June, with areas around Jakarta losing power for several days despite government claims the problem was resolved.
  • Coal shortages — not a global energy shock — drove the outages after Jakarta cut production quotas to lift world prices, prompting miners to favor exports and dump lower-quality coal at home.
  • $173 million to $562 million in estimated losses have deepened business concerns that unreliable power will deter investment, especially in Java, the country’s main economic hub.
  • For President Prabowo Subianto, the outages add to pressure from rising food and fuel prices and student protests, raising the risk that power cuts become a broader political flashpoint.

Insights

Amidst a global energy war, are Indonesia's domestic policies pushing its economy and key foreign investments past a breaking point?
Is Indonesia’s new state coal monopoly a bold revenue play or a final blow to its crashing economy?
With its grid failing, why is Indonesia extending old coal plants instead of embracing more secure renewable energy?