Chinese Investors Protest Indonesian Nickel Policies
Leaked letter details concerns over royalty increases, forex rules, and mining quotas.
نظرة سريعة
- Chinese investors in Indonesia's nickel industry have formally protested new government policies, including proposed royalty increases and stricter foreign exchange rules.
- The China Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia cited increased operational costs and undermined investment certainty, potentially impacting the future of Chinese capital in the nation's industrialization program.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
Chinese investors in Indonesia's nickel sector have sent a formal protest letter to President Prabowo Subianto regarding recent government policies. These policies include proposed royalty increases, stricter foreign exchange retention rules, and reduced mining quotas.
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Published: 3:00pm, 13 Jun 2026
Chinese investors in Indonesia’s nickel industry recently sent a formal protest letter to President Prabowo Subianto. The message reflects their concerns over Indonesia’s political and economic direction, and the long-term trajectory of Chinese investment and Indonesia’s industrialisation programme will hinge on how Indonesia resolves them.
The letter, submitted by the China Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia (CCCI), complained about a series of government policies, including proposed royalty increases, stricter foreign exchange retention rules, sharp reductions in nickel mining quotas and what investors described as increasingly indiscriminate law enforcement.
Collectively, Chinese firms argued these measures had significantly increased operational costs and undermined investment certainty in Indonesia’s downstream nickel sectors.
The nickel industry has arguably become the economic backbone of modern Indonesia-China relations. Over the past decade, Chinese firms have invested more than US$65 billion in smelters, industrial estates and EV battery material processing facilities, particularly in Sulawesi and North Maluku.
Indonesia’s downstreaming industrial strategy, enforced through a raw ore export ban and domestic processing mandate, succeeded primarily because Chinese capital and technology were willing to take the risks associated with such industrial policy. Regulatory coercion via export bans, cheap coal-based energy and weak environmental enforcement together created the conditions for Chinese capital expansion.
ما الذي يجب مراقبته
توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
Indonesia may reconsider some of its nickel policy changes to retain Chinese investment.
محتمل · خلال أشهر
أسئلة مفتوحة
- How will President Subianto respond to the investors' grievances?
- Will these policies deter future Chinese investment in Indonesia?
- What are the long-term implications for Indonesia's industrialization strategy?



