Newmont Indonesia declares force majeure

Newmont Indonesia has informed the government and employees that it is declaring a force majeure at its copper and gold mine in Batu Hijau amid restrictions on exports.

Newmont Indonesia has informed the government and employees that it is declaring a force majeure at its copper and gold mine in Batu Hijau amid restrictions on exports.

The company has placed about 80% of Batu Hijau’s 4,000 employees on leave at reduced pay starting Friday June 6, it said in a statement on Thursday.

“We have taken numerous steps to help resolve the export issue and support the government’s desire to increase in-country smelting,” Martiono Hadianto, president director of PT Newmont Nusa Tenggara (PTNNT), Newmont’s local subsidiary, said in the statement.

“We have not been able to export copper concentrate since January and we still do not have an export permit,” he said, adding, “The new export conditions, duty and ban fundamentally impact Batu Hijau’s economics and conflict with our contract of work. As a result, we are left with no option but to declare force majeure.”

PTNNT said it continues discussions with the government to seek a resolution of the export issues, however, “the Batu Hijau copper and gold mine will be in care and maintenance as efforts to resolve the export issues continue”.

PTNNT said it would continue selling copper concentrate from storage to Indonesia’s only smelter PT Smelting in Gresik. It has said it supplies about 30% of its copper concentrates production to the smelter.

The company expects to make about 81,000 tonnes of concentrate shipments to Gresik between now and the end of the year.

“PT Smelting has capacity limitations and cannot purchase sufficient quantities of PTNNT’s copper concentrates to allow for ongoing normal operations at Batu Hijau,” the company said.

Earlier this week, the company said it had stopped production at its Batu Hijau mine in Indonesia as it sheds were full. 

PT Freeport Indonesia and PTNNT have not exported copper concentrates since the export ban came into effect on January 12. This was accompanied by a proposal to tax concentrates at 25% now, 35% at the beginning of next year and 60% by the second half of 2016.

Officials from the major copper producers met with government officials this week.

Local media reports quoted government officials as saying that the producers have agreed “in principle to pay an export tax”.

No details on what the new export tax would be and how it will be linked with the companies’ downstream plans have been made available.

Shivani Singh 
shivani.singh@metalbulletinasia.com
Twitter: @ShivaniSingh_MB 

What to read next
Explore the base metals outlook 2026 and learn how market trends are impacting copper, tin, and other metals this year.
Fastmarkets proposes to amend the pricing frequency of its copper grade A cathode premium, delivered Germany; copper grade A cathode premium, cif Leghorn; and copper EQ cathode premium, cif Europe to one a week from the current fortnightly basis, effective December 30.
Understand the dynamics of Saudi Arabia steel scrap prices with insights on local market conditions and demand fluctuations.
Fastmarkets wishes to clarify details around the pricing calendar for its MB-FEU-0001 Ferro-tungsten basis 75% W, in-whs dup Rotterdam; MB-FEV-0001 Ferro-vanadium basis 78% V min, 1st grade, ddp Western Europe; and MB-FN-0001 Ferro-niobium 63-67% delivered consumer works, dp, Europe price assessments owing to the year-end festive period.
The publication of Fastmarkets’ black mass inferred prices for Monday December 8 were delayed due to a technical error. Fastmarkets pricing database has been updated.
This price is a part of the Fastmarkets scrap package. For more information on our North America Ferrous Scrap methodology and specifications please click here. To get in touch about access to this price assessment, please contact customer.success@fastmarkets.com.