Indonesia launches nickel, tin online tracking system
JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indonesia launched on Monday an online system to track movements of nickel and tin from mines to domestic processing facilities to improve accountability and government revenue, authorities said.
The system, known as SIMBARA, was first implemented in 2022 to track coal, with a plan to widen its use to other minerals.
Indonesia is the world's biggest exporter of coal. It is the top global producer of nickel and one of the largest producers of tin.
Speaking at the launch, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said the system had improved governance in the coal sector, including by forcing companies to pay liabilities to the state, and she hoped to replicate this with nickel and tin.
For coal, the system monitors compliance on documentation of mining quotas, known as RKAB, all the way to export papers, flows of funds, logistics, the people involved, as well as the goods, Sri Mulyani said.
A senior government official told Reuters last week that for tin and nickel, the system will first track transportation, including interisland shipments, from mines to domestic processing facilities and will be linked with RKAB.
"With this system, we can work tidily, consistently, firm, authoritative and without burdening companies," Sri Mulyani said.
Improvement in compliance is expected to increase tin and nickel miners' royalty payments by between 5 trillion and 10 trillion rupiah ($308 million and $616 million) in a year, Coordinating Minister of Maritime and Investment Affairs Luhut Pandjaitan said at the same event.
Nickel miner group APNI hopes SIMBARA will help prevent illegal mining and avoid oversupply such as what happened in recent years, Secretary-General Meidy Katrin Lengkey said.
Through SIMBARA, authorities