The Indonesian coal market has recently sent out several key signals worth paying attention to.
First, let's look at production. Indonesia's mining sector announced that next year's nickel production quotas will be adjusted based on actual demand, and approximately 600 million tons of coal production targets may also be approved. Historically, Indonesia's coal output was 836 million tons in 2024, and it is expected to decline to around 750 million tons in 2025, showing a clear downward trend. The figure of 600 million tons sounds alarming, but in practice, it is unlikely to fall that sharply— a more realistic trajectory should be around 700 million tons.
But that's not all. Domestic coal demand in Indonesia continues to grow, which means the available export surplus will be further compressed. As a result: although production has not plummeted, export volumes are accelerating their decline, directly pushing up international coal prices.
Now, let's look at the change in export tariffs. The Indonesian Ministry of Finance disclosed on January 5th that, although the legal documents have not yet been officially issued, coal export tariffs have been levied since January 1st and will be retrospectively collected. The tax rate is tiered: 5%, 8%, 11%, depending on coal prices. To offset cost pressures, Indonesian sellers have already raised their quotes, with the prices for medium- and low-calorie coal generally increased by $2 to $2.5 per ton.
The combination of these two factors—tightening supply and increased tariff costs—has basically sealed the upward trajectory of Indonesian coal prices.
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CryptoMom
· 13h ago
Damn, Indonesian coal prices are going up again? That must hurt a lot, the energy sector is about to get restless.
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OldLeekNewSickle
· 17h ago
Tightening supply + tariffs double hit, Indonesian coal prices are about to soar... Speaking of which, this combination looks familiar, and the chopping of leeks is indeed a sophisticated technique.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 20h ago
Indonesia's recent moves are really ruthless—squeezing supply, imposing another tariff, and coal prices are about to take off.
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Saying 600 million tons sounds good, but in reality, it's just a disguised price hike. Those in the know understand.
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With domestic demand growing and exports being suppressed, this combination of measures is bound to push international coal prices higher.
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The tax tracing method is brilliant—passing all costs downstream, sellers are already starting to raise prices.
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The tiered export tariff system—doesn't it just depend on the weather? The higher the coal price, the heavier the tax. That's something.
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It seems Indonesia is aiming for a high-end route, preferring to export less but earn more, since domestic demand is there.
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A rise of $2 to $2.5 per ton may not seem like much, but it’s a significant shock to the entire industry chain.
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The logic is really just two words: squeezing. Squeezing capacity, squeezing competitors, squeezing profit margins.
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RugpullTherapist
· 22h ago
Indonesia's move this time, reducing supply, increasing export taxes, is definitely going to cut into global coal buyers.
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LiquidationAlert
· 01-09 09:54
Indonesia's recent actions, including the strict enforcement of tariff retroactive payments, are indeed aggressive. Export volumes have shrunk, and prices are rising sharply. Short-term, this is a positive signal for coal bulls.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-09 09:54
This move in Indonesia is really impressive—supply tightening combined with double taxation, causing coal prices to soar without any room for negotiation.
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ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 01-09 09:52
Wow, Indonesia's move directly caused a market crash? With supply tightening and tariffs coming again, coal prices are about to take off.
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tx_pending_forever
· 01-09 09:40
Indonesia's move is really clever, retroactively collecting export tariffs? It directly gives a boost to coal prices.
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FlippedSignal
· 01-09 09:30
Indonesia's recent move is quite aggressive, with export tariff tracing and collection, causing coal prices to soar...
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GasFeeTherapist
· 01-09 09:29
Indonesia's move this time, choking supply and imposing tariffs simultaneously, has dealt a double blow. The coal prices are soaring and there's no escape.
The Indonesian coal market has recently sent out several key signals worth paying attention to.
First, let's look at production. Indonesia's mining sector announced that next year's nickel production quotas will be adjusted based on actual demand, and approximately 600 million tons of coal production targets may also be approved. Historically, Indonesia's coal output was 836 million tons in 2024, and it is expected to decline to around 750 million tons in 2025, showing a clear downward trend. The figure of 600 million tons sounds alarming, but in practice, it is unlikely to fall that sharply— a more realistic trajectory should be around 700 million tons.
But that's not all. Domestic coal demand in Indonesia continues to grow, which means the available export surplus will be further compressed. As a result: although production has not plummeted, export volumes are accelerating their decline, directly pushing up international coal prices.
Now, let's look at the change in export tariffs. The Indonesian Ministry of Finance disclosed on January 5th that, although the legal documents have not yet been officially issued, coal export tariffs have been levied since January 1st and will be retrospectively collected. The tax rate is tiered: 5%, 8%, 11%, depending on coal prices. To offset cost pressures, Indonesian sellers have already raised their quotes, with the prices for medium- and low-calorie coal generally increased by $2 to $2.5 per ton.
The combination of these two factors—tightening supply and increased tariff costs—has basically sealed the upward trajectory of Indonesian coal prices.