Indonesia has unveiled its electricity supply business plan (RUPTL) for 2025-34, which indicates renewable energy and fossil fuel-powered plant capacity is set to expand.
Under the RUPTL for state-owned power utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN), Indonesia aims to add 69.5GW of additional capacity by 2034, announced energy minister Bahlil Lahadalia on 26 May. Out of this, around 76pc will be made up of renewable energy sources and energy storage systems such as batteries and pumped storage.
Over the first five years of the plan, a total of 27.9GW in capacity will be built, including 9.2GW of gas-fired power, 12.2GW of renewable energy, 3GW worth of storage systems, and 3.5GW of coal-fired power plants that are already in the final stages of construction, according to Indonesia's energy ministry (ESDM).
In the second half of the 10-year plan, Indonesia will focus on the development of 37.7GW of renewable energy and energy storage. The remaining 3.9GW will still be from fossil fuel-powered plants, including coal and gas.
Out of the planned capacity additions, solar power takes up the largest share at 17.1GW. Wind constitutes 7.2GW, geothermal 5.2GW, hydropower 11.7GW, and bioenergy 0.9GW. Indonesia also plans to introduce nuclear power into the energy mix, with the construction of two small reactor units in Sumatra and Kalimantan, each with a capacity of 250MW.
The government also aims to develop the infrastructure necessary to support electricity distribution and system reliability. This includes the development of a transmission network of almost 48,000km and substations with a total capacity of about 108GW, which will be built across Indonesia.
The RUPTL is supposed to be a guideline for national electricity development over the next decade, and it is expected to provide more certainty for investors, said the ESDM. The plan creates investment opportunities of up to 2,967 trillion rupiah ($182.5bn), according to the ESDM, for the construction of power plants, transmission networks, electricity distribution and village electricity programmes. Around 73pc of the planned power capacity is planned to come from partnerships with private sector independent power producers, while the remainder will be managed by PLN.
Indonesia's electricity demand is expected to grow by about 3.8pc/yr to 1,813TWh/yr by 2060, but its power sector is still heavily reliant on coal, which made up 61.8pc of the electricity mix in 2023. In comparison, renewables made up 19pc, out of which solar and wind power constituted a mere 0.2pc.
But the share of renewables in Indonesia's power mix is expected to rise to around 21pc by 2030 and 41pc by 2040, according to think-tank Ember, in line with the rise in renewable power capacity under the latest RUPTL

