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FW Desk News
FreightWatch.News
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Indonesia's government will detail its centralized export agency model for coal, palm oil, and ferroalloys within weeks. Officials are finalizing the legal architecture underlying this sweeping policy shift.
Trade Ministry officials confirmed the timeline during regional economic discussions, signaling the transition from announcement to implementation phase. The initiative aims to strengthen state oversight of key commodity flows while addressing tax collection gaps and currency pressures.
The plan has prompted significant uncertainty among coal miners, palm-oil producers, and trading firms scrambling to understand operational mechanics under the new framework. Indonesian officials said they are closely monitoring market reactions as the policy takes shape, suggesting willingness to incorporate feedback during rollout.
The centralized agency represents a departure from Indonesia's historical reliance on private-sector commodity export channels. Implementation details—including licensing requirements, pricing mechanisms, and producer participation—remain pending.