






Indonesia's bauxite, alumina, and aluminum industry is in the midst of a profound transformation as of December 29, 2025, propelled by aggressive regulatory reforms under the current administration, a stronger emphasis on environmental enforcement, digital transparency tools, and surging domestic demand from strategic sectors like electric vehicles (EVs), renewable energy, and national infrastructure. These elements collectively reinforce Indonesia's "resource nationalism" strategy, empowering broader participation, enforcing strict oversight, prioritizing downstream value addition, and protecting forests while creating explosive pull for the entire value chain.
The longstanding raw bauxite export ban remains firmly in place, channeling resources toward domestic alumina refining and aluminum smelting. New 2025 measures balance inclusivity with discipline, while demand drivers led by the national car initiative and EV ecosystem project with EVs alone requiring aluminum for lightweighting, battery casings, and components.
These reforms, enacted under the new government, aim to democratize resource access, tighten production controls, and drive sustainable value creation.
Fourth Amendment to the Mineral and Coal Mining Law (Law No. 2/2025, enacted March 2025) The cornerstone legislative change, fast-tracked in February 2025.
This amendment strongly backs integrated bauxite-alumina-aluminum chains but has raised concerns over environmental risks, land conflicts, and governance challenges from less-experienced operators.
Reinstatement of Annual RKAB (Work Plan and Budget) System (ESDM Regulation No. 17/2025, effective October 2025) A major policy shift from the prior multi-year system:
Supporting Regulations
SIMBARA System Expansion (Ongoing in 2025) The Sistem Informasi Mineral dan Batubara (SIMBARA) digital platform launched for coal in 2022, expanded to nickel / tin in 2024, is progressively incorporating other metallic minerals, including bauxite, as announced by ESDM in mid-2025. Full integration is targeted progressively through 2025 and into 2026.
Administrative Fines for Mining in Forest Areas (Effective December 1, 2025) To combat rampant illegal / unauthorized mining in protected forest zones (kawasan hutan), the Satuan Tugas Penertiban Kawasan Hutan (Satgas PKH) task force (led by the Attorney General's office) has implemented strict administrative fines.
Specific Fine Amounts per Hectare (effective immediately):
These rates stem from Satgas PKH agreements (based on November 2025 directives). By late December 2025, the task force has imposed/started collecting massive fines (total potential IDR 142 trillion across palm oil and mining; actual collections in trillions, including IDR 1.2+ trillion on individual cases), reclaimed over 4 million hectares of illegal land (including mining sites), and enforced site sealing, permit suspensions, and mandatory reclamation/restoration (companies fund recovery or face further penalties).
For bauxite/aluminum, this is critical: Many deposits (e.g., West Kalimantan) overlap forests, where illegal operations have been prevalent. Combined with SIMBARA tracking, fines push compliance, promote proper land rehabilitation, and align with stricter ESG mandates.
Here are real-world visuals of bauxite mining impacts and reclamation efforts in forest areas (e.g., West Kalimantan, showing open-pit operations, deforestation, and post-mining rehabilitation challenges):
Momentum from late-2025 proposals signals continued tightening and growth support.
| Regulation/Change | Key Impact on Bauxite/Alumina/Aluminum | 2026 Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| Mining Law 4th Amendment (No. 2/2025) | Broader access + downstream priority | Continued rollout; ESG/governance tweaks |
| Annual RKAB System (Permen ESDM 17/2025) | Tighter control, curbs oversupply | First full year; stricter refinery-aligned quotas |
| SIMBARA Expansion (to bauxite) | Real-time tracking, fraud prevention, compliance enforcement | Full integration; stronger supply chain oversight |
| Forest Mining Administrative Fines (Kepmen ESDM 391.K/2025) | IDR 1.76 billion/ha for bauxite violations; reclamation push | Increased enforcement, collections & site cleanups |
| HGBT Extension Proposal | Major energy cost cuts for smelters | Likely early approval; accelerates projects |
| Sustainability/ESG Mandates | Stricter reclamation & compliance | Deeper integration in quotas/licensing |
High-impact programs especially the national car and EV ecosystem which potentially drive massive aluminum demand.
In summary, 2025–2026 regulations bolstered by SIMBARA tracking and high forest fines create a disciplined, sustainable framework, while demand initiatives (national car + EVs) generate strong pull for the bauxite-alumina-aluminum chain. This synergy could cement Indonesia's position as a global aluminum powerhouse.
For queries, please contact Lemon Zhao at lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please email service.en@smm.cn