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Indonesia imposes new nickel royalty rates

  • : Metals
  • 25/04/29

The Indonesian government has implemented new royalty rates, also known as the non-tax revenue or Penerimaan Negara Bukan Pajak (PNBP) for nickel products, effective from 26 April.

Some of the effective royalty rates were slightly adjusted from the previous proposal on 8 March.

The PNBP royalty rate for nickel ore remained the same as the proposal, which was revised from a fixed 10pc to a range of 14-19pc, depending on the Harga Mineral Acuan (HMA) nickel price — the reference price for nickel ore.

Implemented nickel pig iron (NPI) royalty rates were also as proposed at 5-7pc, depending on the HMA, from a flat rate of 5pc.

The Indonesian government set the new royalty rate for ferronickel at 4-6pc, a slight drop from the proposed 5-7pc but an increase from the previous fixed 2pc.

Royalty rates of nickel matte were similarly imposed lower at 3.5-5.5pc, down from the proposed 4.5-6.5pc but higher than the previous 2-3pc.

Royalty rates for nickel mixed-hydroxide-precipitate (MHP) were newly introduced at a flat rate of 2pc.

The new royalty rates are expected to increase production costs in the longer term but is likely to have limited immediate impact on prices. The nickel industry and government are in ongoing discussions over profitability concerns and possibility of delaying the implementation, but other details could not be confirmed.

Nickel royalty rates
HMA nickel ($/t)Proposal on 8 March (%)Implemented rates (%)
Nickel ore
<18,00014.014.0
18,000 < 21,00015.015.0
21,000 < 24,00016.016.0
24,000 < 31,00018.018.0
≥ 31,00019.019.0
NPI
<18,0005.05.0
18,000 < 21,0005.55.5
21,000 < 24,0006.06.0
24,000 < 31,0006.56.5
≥ 31,0007.07.0
Ferronickel
<18,0005.04.0
18,000 < 21,0005.54.5
21,000 < 24,0006.05.0
24,000 < 31,0006.55.5
≥ 31,0007.06.0
Nickel matte
<18,0004.53.5
18,000 < 21,0005.04.0
21,000 < 24,0005.54.5
24,000 < 31,0006.05.0
≥ 31,0006.55.5
MHP
Flate rate-2.0

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25/05/21

IEA warns of lithium and copper deficits by 2035

IEA warns of lithium and copper deficits by 2035

London, 21 May (Argus) — The Paris-based IEA has warned that global deficits of copper and lithium by 2035 could be exacerbated in some regions owing to concentration of supply and refining, leading to a potential "Opec moment" for critical minerals. In its new Global Critical Minerals Outlook report, the IEA said lithium could see a 40pc deficit by 2035, even if all current projects proceed, while copper is expected to reach a 30pc deficit by the same year. "Diversification is the watchword for energy security, but the critical minerals world has moved in the opposite direction in recent years, particularly in refining and processing," the report's executive summary said. "The average market share of the top three refining nations of key energy minerals rose from around 82pc in 2020 to 86pc in 2024 as some 90pc of supply growth came from the top single supplier alone: Indonesia for nickel and China for cobalt, graphite and rare earths." In the lithium market, demand tripled from 2020 to 2024, and will triple again by 2035. By then, the electric vehicle (EV) sector will make up 90pc of additional demand while 95pc of future demand growth comes from battery applications: EVs, grid-scale energy storage and battery backup systems, reaching 3.7mn t LCE by 2035. Three countries — Australia, China and Chile — will control up to 69pc of lithium mining by 2030, while China is expected to control 62pc of refining by the same year. "China extracts only 22pc of lithium — but controls 70pc of global refining and 95pc of hard-rock lithium processing," the report said. The copper market is also expected to grow rapidly, supporting the energy transition, but underinvestment and dwindling resource quality will limit supply. Copper demand rises by 30pc by 2040 under the IEA's base-case (STEPS) scenario, up from 27mn t in 2024 to 34mn t by 2040. The IEA predicts a sharp deficit in supply by 2035, up to a 30pc deficit in primary supply. China is expected to dominate refining of copper, responsible for 47pc in 2030. The report said investment of up to $150bn-180bn is needed to keep pace with the global energy transition. "Despite strong copper demand from electrification, the current mine project pipeline points to a potential 30pc supply shortfall by 2035 due to declining ore grades, rising capital costs, limited resource discoveries and long lead times," the report said. By Thomas Kavanagh Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Community Union lambasts Liberty Steel ownership


25/05/20
25/05/20

Community Union lambasts Liberty Steel ownership

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India's Shyam Metalics to build West Bengal wagon plant


25/05/20
25/05/20

India's Shyam Metalics to build West Bengal wagon plant

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GFG puts Australian Mn plant on care and maintenance


25/05/20
25/05/20

GFG puts Australian Mn plant on care and maintenance

Sydney, 20 May (Argus) — UK-owned steelmaker GFG Alliances has placed its Liberty Bell Bay manganese alloy smelter in Tasmania into care and maintenance over manganese ore supply issues, Tasmanian minister for business, industry and resources Eric Abetz said on 19 May. GFG is committed to the long term success of the Liberty Bell smelter and expects the pause to be temporary, a company spokesperson told Argus on 20 May. The Tasmanian state government is working with GFG and the Australian federal government to address challenges at the plant. It has also asked prime minister Anthony Albanese to support Liberty Bell, state premier Jeremy Rockcliff said on 20 May. Liberty Bell Bay is Australia's only ferroalloy plant and is permitted to produce a combined total of 290,000 t/yr of ferromanganese and silicomanganese. GFG sources Liberty Bell Bay's manganese ore from Australian metal producer South32's Australian Gemco mine and South African sites, which have faced recent production disruptions because of bad weather and maintenance shutdowns. Cyclone Megan flooded and damaged parts of Gemco in March 2024, taking it off line for four months. South32 closed the mine again in January-March 2025 to complete mine dewatering work. South32 also cut manganese production at its South African operations by 10pc on the year in January-March because of scheduled maintenance work and an unplanned shutdown at its Wessels mine. Gemco's manganese production is forecast to reach approximately 5mn t in the 2025-26 financial year ending 30 June, the Northern Territory state government said in a budget announcement. South32 has not released its Gemco production guidance for 2025-26. Liberty Bell Bay's production pause comes after the South Australian state government placed GFG's 1.2mn t/yr Whyalla steelworks into administration in February. The state government later announced plans to transfer control of the Whyalla port from GFG to the steelwork's administrators. Liberty Bell Bay is one of only six facilities in Tasmania covered under Australia's federal safeguard mechanism. It received 8,762 safeguard mechanism credits (SMCs) for the July 2023-June 2024 compliance year as its covered scope 1 emissions of 196,125t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) were below its baseline of 204,887t of CO2e. Two facilities operated by GFG — the Whyalla steelworks and the Middleback Range iron ore mine — ended the compliance year in an excess emissions situation because they were in administration, according to the Clean Energy Regulator (CER). By Avinash Govind and Juan Weik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

China's CATL raises $4.6bn from Hong Kong IPO


25/05/20
25/05/20

China's CATL raises $4.6bn from Hong Kong IPO

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