Upload
others
View
1
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Manufacturing Webinar November 8th , 2016
Dr. Henry Loewendahl, CEO WAVTEQ
Mr. Scott Bryan, Executive Director Client Services, ROI [email protected]
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Contents
• Introduction 3• Chemicals sector 8• Industrial machinery sector 15• Indonesia’s competitiveness 23• About BKPM 34• Appendix 1: BKPM investor support 39• Appendix 2: FDI regulations 46
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Introduction
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
About Indonesia
Indonesia’s GDP will increase by over 150% to $2.2 trillion by 2025 –close to Canada’s
Indonesia has the 4th
largest population in the world (261 million as of August 2016)
Indonesia is one of the fastest growing economies in the world in the world (>5% p.a. 2012-16)
Access to the $2.5 trillion ASEAN market with a population of 620 million
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Canadian investment in Indonesia
invested by Canadian firms
in Indonesia
of Canadian investors in Indonesia are
planning to re-invest in Indonesia
(WAVTEQ, June 2016 survey)
of Canadian investors in Indonesia would recommend other
Canadian companies to invest in Indonesia
(WAVTEQ, June 2016 survey)
Renewables was the sector with the best opportunities for FDI into Indonesia according to Canadian investors.
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Why invest in the manufacturing sector?
Size of workforce
15+ million employment in the
manufacturing sector in 2015
#1 in Asia for industry
41.3%Indonesia’ proportion of GDP in industry is higher than rest of
ASEAN and overtook China in 2015
Track record
$59 billionManufacturing FDI in
Indonesia 2011-15
$
Growth in manufacturing
7%average annual growth
forecast 2016-2020
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Growth of manufacturing1. Indonesia’s manufacturing sector is growing rapidly, with growth
set to reach nearly 9% per annum in 2019
2. Growth in manufacturing is faster than overall GDP growth, and Indonesia is becoming a hub for manufacturing investment
Indonesia’s manufacturing and GDP growth and forecasts, % change (2011-2019)
Source: WAVTEQ based on Indonesian Ministry of Industry, Facts and Figures 2015
7.5 7.0
5.5 5.6 6.16.9 7.4
8.1 8.6
6.2 6.0 5.6 5.05.8
6.6 7.1 7.5 8.0
0
2
4
6
8
10
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Total manufacturinggrowth
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Chemicals sector
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Why invest in the chemicals sector?
Growth in chemicals
7.6%average annual growth of
the chemicals sector
Track record
$12 billionChemicals related FDI in
Indonesia 2011-15
$
Agricultural chemicals has been the 3rd largest
sector for chemicals FDI into Indonesia (2011-15)
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Agricultural fertilisers and chemicals
Market demand• In 2016, total market demand for food & beverages in Indonesia is
expected to reach nearly US$230 billion and is projected to reach around US$330 billion by 2020.
• According to the EIU, the value of the food demand is expected to grow at a compound average growth rate of 10% per annum between 2016 and 2020.
Agricultural area• Indonesia’s total agricultural area is 54 million hectares. The area is
still steadily expanding, with an annual average growth rate of nearly 12% between 2001 and 2011.
The expansion of agricultural land and production is directly increasing the demand for agricultural fertilisers
and chemicals.
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Growth of fertilizer production in Indonesia
• From 2011 to 2015, production increased by 10.34%, reaching over 11.5 million tonnes of nutrients in 2015.
Fertilizer production, by million tonnes of nutrients, 2011-2015
Source: Indonesian Association of Fertilizer Producers (APPI) http://www.appi.or.id/?statistic
10559
11905
11368 1126311651
9500
10000
10500
11000
11500
12000
12500
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Key growth segments in fertilizer production
Fertilizer production by type as a proportion of total production, Indonesia, 2011-2015
1. Urea is the major segment, accounting for just under 60% of production in 2015
2. The share of organic has doubled to 6.3% of total production in 2015 vs. 2011
3. The share of NPK has also increased from 21% to 25.8% in 2015
Source: Indonesian Association of Fertilizer Producers (APPI) http://www.appi.or.id/?statistic
NPK25.8%
Organic6.4%
ZK (K2SO4)
0.1%Fosfat/SP-36
2.4%ZA/AS6.0%
Urea59.4%
2015
NPK21.0%
Organic3.2%
ZK (K2SO4)0.0%Fosfat/SP-36
4.2%
ZA/AS7.7%
Urea63.9%
2011
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Track record in attracting FDI
FDI flows into Indonesia in the chemicals sector (2010-15), US$m
Source: Based on BKPM data
1. Indonesia had attracted $11.7 billion of FDI in the chemicals sector since 2011 with almost $2 billion of FDI in 2015 (Source: BKPM)
1467
2770
3142
2323
1956
00
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
FDI Track Record – case studies
Elevance Renewable Sciences, a US-based chemical company has opened a bio-feedstocks plant in Gresik, Indonesia. The investment is a joint venture project with Wilmar International, an agribusiness group based in Indonesia. The plant initially will operate using palm oil, but also can run on soybean, mustard or other bio-feeds.
Sorini Agro Asia Corporindo, a chemicals company and a subsidiary of US-based Cargill, is investing $46 million to establish a new starch sweetener plant in Cikande, Indonesia with capacity of 100,000 tonnes per year
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Industrial machinery &
equipment sector
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Why invest in machinery & equipment?
Track record
$13 billionmachinery &
equipment related foreign direct investment in
Indonesia 2011-15
$Rapid growth
8%+ growth p.a.
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Growth of industrial machinery & equipment1. The sector is rapidly growing, with manufacturing of machinery
& equipment growing by 8.80% in 2014
2. The # companies in the sector has nearly tripled from 2009-2016
No. companies in industrial machinery, equipment & tools, 2009-2016
Source:fDi Intelligence from the Financial Times Limited
990
15831938
22642451 2523 2609 2696
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Key sources of demandIn 2014, one-third of Indonesia’s GDP was in agri-business, construction and mining, generating very strong demand for machinery & equipment
Source: WAVTEQ based on Indonesian Ministry of Industry, Facts and Figures 2015
Agriculture, Forestry, and
Fishing13% Construction
10%
Mining and Quarrying
10%
Transportation and Storage
4%Electricity and Gas Supply
1%
Other 62%
Sector contribution to GDP, (%), 2014
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Key opportunities – energy & miningEnergyThe Electricity Supply Business Plan (RUPTL) indicates at least 80.5 GW of power plants will need to be constructed by 2025, with around 50 GW coming from Independent Power Producers (IPPs). Very strong focus on renewable energy
MiningOne of the world’s largest producers of tin, nickel, ignite, copper & coal. More than half of total demand for heavy equipment in Indonesia comes from the mining sector. More than half of total demand for heavy equipment in Indonesia comes from the mining sector. Sales of construction & mining equipment could rise up to 5000 units in 2016
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Key opportunities – agri & constructionAgricultureTotal market demand for food & is expected to reach nearly $230 billion in 2016 and $330billion by 2020 – 10% growth per annum. Dairy products and fisheries are two key growth areas, with some products (like yogurt) growing by nearly 20% p.a.
ConstructionIndonesia’s construction sector is growing 7-8% per year. There is a backlog of some 15 million residential units. International tourism receipts are forecast by EIU to grow from $9.5 billion in 2015 to $13.7 billion in 2020. Around $14 billion of investment is needed for tourism development. Some 50 locations in Indonesia are available for tourism development. There has been over $8 billon of FDI in Indonesia’s construction sector from 2011-15
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Track record in attracting FDI
1773
2453
3327
2472
3092
00
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
FDI flows into Indonesia in the Machinery, Metals and Electronics (2010-15), US$ million
Source: Based on BKPM data
Indonesia had attracted over $13 billion of FDI into the sector since 2011 with over $3 billion of FDI in 2015
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
FDI Track Record – case studies
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Indonesia’s competitive
position
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Size of market
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
Indonesia
Philippines
Thailand
Malaysia
Vietnam
Singapore
Indonesia’s GDP 2025 forecast:• Increase >150% to $2.2 trillion• Larger than India’s in 2015• Nearly same size as Canada’s ($2.6 tn)• GDP/capita: $3370 (2015) to $7840
GDP 2011-2025, US$ billion (EIU forecasts)
Indonesia’s middle-income is nearly 70 million households (41% of ASEAN). High-income households = 25% p.a. growth
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Size of population
6
31
69
92
101
255
7
36
70
103
128
308
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
Singapore
Malaysia
Thailand
Vietnam
Philippines
Indonesia
Population projection (mid-2030, Millions) Population (2015, Millions)
Source: fDi Benchmark (IMF and Population Reference Bureau World Population Data Sheet)
Population by country, 2015-2030
Indonesia’s population is the 4th largest in the world and will increase to over
300 million people
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Skilled workforce
Source: fDi Benchmark (Global Competitiveness Report, World Economic Forum, Switzerland, 2015-16 )
Availability of Scientists and Engineers – out of 7 (2015)
3.9
4.0
4.2
4.3
4.5
4.6
3.4 3.6 3.8 4 4.2 4.4 4.6
Vietnam
Philippines
India
Thailand
China
Indonesia
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Available workforceUnemployment rate, 2015-2020
3.6%
6.0%
4.1%
3.2%
2.4%
2.0%
0.8%
5.9%
8.4%
6.0%
4.0%
2.9%
2.9%
1.9%
0.8%
6.3%
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10%
India
Philippines
China
Malaysia
Vietnam
Singapore
Thailand
Indonesia
Forecast Unemployment Rate in 2020 (%) Unemployment Ratein 2015 (%)
Source: fDi Benchmark (Economist Intelligence Unit March 2016 & International Monetary Fund 2016)
Indonesia’s has the least tight labour force in ASEAN
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Low taxes
Total Tax Rate (% profit) in 2015
61%
68%
43%
40%
39%
28%
30%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%
India
China
Philippines
Malaysia
Vietnam
Thailand
Indonesia
Source: fDi Benchmark (World Bank Doing Business 2016)
Indonesia’s has low effective tax rates
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Average monthly wages
Average monthly wages, USD, 2011-2020
Source: EIU
0.00
100.00
200.00
300.00
400.00
500.00
600.00
700.00
800.00
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Indonesia
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Indonesia is very cost effective - the average monthly wage is $161 and is forecast to be the lowest in ASEAN
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Labour costs for production positionsLabour costs by country for production positions, USD, 2015*
$10,277
$807
$7,672
$6,938
$5,562
$4,963
$5,748
$8,301
$5,156
$5,294
$4,807
$4,938
$4,422
$4,493
$5,814
$3,465
$2,947
$1,424
$2,273
$2,297
$2,490
$0 $2,000 $4,000 $6,000 $8,000 $10,000 $12,000
China
Malaysia
Thailand
India
Philippines
Vietnam
Indonesia
Production Operative (Unskilled) Production Operative (Skilled)
Production Operative (Highly Skilled)
Source: fDi Benchmark. Note: Singapore labour costs are $13,323 for unskilled, $26,086 for skilled, and $32,907 for highly skilled). *Includes wages and statutory social insurance costs paid by employer
Indonesia’s has highly competitive
labour costs
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Labour costs for engineering positions
Labour costs by country for an engineer, USD, 2015*
Source: fDi Benchmark
Indonesia’s has highly competitive
labour costs
57537
24030
15893
15840
15552
13801
12000
11029
0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000
Singapore
China
India
Malaysia
Thailand
Indonesia
Philippines
Vietnam
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
InnovationTotal of Patent applications, non-residents (foreign investors) (2014)
3255
3960
6267
6924
9009
7321
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000
Philippines
Vietnam
Malaysia
Thailand
Singapore
Indonesia
Source: fDi Benchmark (World Bank World Development Indicators)
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Low cost of living
Cost of Living Index, 2015*
Source: fDi Benchmark *Rating 0-10 (0=lowest cost of living; 10=highest cost of living) (2014)
5.7
3.28
2.22
2.14
1.86
1.82
1.4
1.79
0 2 4 6
Singapore
China
Malaysia
Thailand
Philippines
Vietnam
India
Indonesia
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
About BKPM and support services
for investors
The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) 35
BKPM The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
As the primary interface between business and government, BKPM is
mandated to boost domestic and foreign direct investment through creating a conducive investment climate.
BKPM was restored to Ministerial status in 2009, and reporting directly to the President of the Republic of Indonesia.
This investment promotion agency’s goal is not only to seek more domestic and foreign investment, but
also to seek quality investments that improve
social inequality and reduce unemployment.
The agency works as a proactive advocate for investments as well as a matchmaker for investors.
Who we are
ABOUT BKPM
The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) 36
About BKPM
What We Offer to Investors? Simplification of business start up and licensing procedures, including
the “one-stop shop” (PTSP) licensing provision at BKPM, 60% reduction of application forms (from 38 to 15 forms).
Establishing an Investor Relation Unit at BKPM for information, facilitation and queries handling from existing and potential investors.
Rolling-out of Electronic Information Services and Investment Licensing (SPIPISE) in 105 PTSP throughout Indonesia.
Helping contain various obstacles and giving consultation on problems investors face in the conduct of investments.
Facilitating foreign workers permit.
Launching of investment tracking system and followed by its
implementation in other Ministries and Regional Governments.
Our services for investors
One-Stop Service
(PTSP) at BKPM
One place
22 ministries integrated
3-hourService
DirectConstruction
90%Regional PTSP formed. 61% regional PTSP
implement e-licensing.
Industry, power, oil & gas, tourismat one place
All sectors
162 permits are delegated
to BKPM One-Stop Integrated Services
Improvement of Investment Service
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
38
Badan Koordinasi Penanaman Modal (BKPM)
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Jl. Jenderal Gatot Subroto No. 44Jakarta 12190 - Indonesia
t . +62 21 525 2008
f . +62 21 525 4945
www.bkpm.go.id
Indonesia Investment Promotion Centre (IIPC)
Thank You
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Appendix 1: BKPM support services for
foreign investors (detailed)
The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM)
40
BKPM
• Arrive at One-stop Integrated Service at BKPM directly from the airport.
• Consult with Director of Investment Service.
• Submit the required documents & data.
8 permits obtained + 1
Wait at the lounge while documents are processed by BKPM, in-house notary, ministries, & other government institutions.
Obtain eight documents & letter of land availability within three hours to start your business.
Certainty to work• RPTKA / Employment plan• IMTA / Working permit
Certainty to start a business• Investment license• Certificate of incorporation• NPWP / Tax registration• TDP / Company registration
Certainty to import capital goods• APIP / Import identification• NIK / Customs registration
Accurate land Information• Letter of land availability
Investment Service Reforms
3-hour Service (I23J)Available for investors with minimum (new
or expansion project) investment of IDR 100 billion (USD 8 million) and/or employing
1,000 local workers.
Or supplier of the existing manufacturing company with minimum investment of IDR
100 billion (USD 8 million) and/or employing 1,000 local workers.
No requirements for investment in infrastructure sector.
Source: Chairman BKPM Reg. No. 6/2015 on Priciple License
The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM)
41
3-hour Investment Licensing Service for Infrastructure
No Minimum investment or workers requirement
Currently there are three sectors is eligible and one
documents can be obtained with
three-hour service.
Investment Priority Service
Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (MEMR) Regulation No. 15 of 2016 regarding three-hour license service in Energy and Mineral Resources. Sectors/license that is available:• Geothermal sector (IPB),• Electricity producer (IUPTL-S),• Electricity transmission sector (IUPTL-S),• Temporary downstream oil and gas business licenses.
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
42
Direct Construction (KLIK)No Requirements
•No minimum investments or workers is required.
•Available for selected industrial parks. •Construction permits can be obtained in parallel with construction process.
Investors can directly start their project construction before obtaining construction permits. This service is
supported by both Central and Regional Governments.
Obtain investment licence at One-stop Integrated Service (PTSP) at national or regional level.
• Survey a land within selected 14 industrial parks (in North Sumatera, Banten, West Java, Central Java, East Java and South Sulawesi).
• Acquire the land for your industry.
• Start the construction of your project. No other permits are required.
• Apply for building construction permit/IMB & environmental permit, and other regional licenses in parallel with construction process.
Priority Investment Service
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
43
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
44
No Industrial Estate Sell Price USD/M2
Lease Price USD/M2
Total Area(ha)
Available Area (ha)
1 Java Integrated Industrial and Port Estate 150 7.5/year 2,993.27 1,761.4
2 Kendal Industrial Park 110 3.5/month 2,700 860
3 Bukit Semarang Baru Industrial Estate 193 - 115 40
4 Wijayakusuma Industrial Estate 115 2.4 – 3.1/month 250 100
5 Karawang Industrial City (KIIC) Negotiable Negotiable 1,470 293
6 Bekasi Fajar Industrial Estate 269 5.76/month 1.500 300
7 Delta Silicon 8 Industrial Park 223 - 230 158
8 GT Tech Park at Karawang Industrial Park 170 – 220 - 400 100
9 Suryacipta City of Industry 170 7.25/month 1.400 100
10 Krakatau Industrial Estate Cilegon 150 - 200 3.5 – 4/month 1,152 563
11 Modern Cikande Industrial Estate 152 - 3,175 1,975
12 Wilmar Integrated Industrial Park 150-175 15-20 /year 1.748 800
13 Medan Industrial Estate 144 2.4/month 780 100
14 Bantaeng Industrial Park 4-15 - 3.000 3.000
Industrial Estate with KLIK Facilities (data may change anytime , exclude 10% VAT)
The Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) 45
Import Facility for Capital Goods
Acceleration and certainty in custom clearance processFaster & Certain•Capital goods do not require screening.•Cutting the processing time from 3-5 days to only 30 minutes.
Simple requirements • Projects under construction • Obliged in reporting quarterly
investment activities (LKPM) • Recommendation from BKPM
CUSTOMS CLEARENCE
Four customs checking status:
•Red lane is for new
companies.Physical & document checks before transported from ports.
•Yellow laneDocument check before goods transported from ports.
•Green laneDocument check after goods transported from ports.
•Main Partner Priority for companies
with proven track record. No checking required.
New Facility:
Status upgrade from red to green lane for new companies under construction
Improvement of Investment Climate
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board
Appendix 2: Foreign
investment regulations
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
47
Law No25/2007 on InvestmentPresidential Reg. No. 39/2014 on Negative Investment ListChairman BKPM Reg. No.14 & 15/2015 on Investment Licensings
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
48
I n d o n e s i a I n v e s t m e n t C o o r d i n a t i n g B o a r d
FRAMEWORK FOR INVESTMENT FISCAL INCENTIVES
4
TAX ALLOWANCE
GR No. 9/2016
30 %
Of the investment valueReduction of corporate tax from net profit for 6 years (5% per year)
143
The business sectors are eligible for a tax allowance (14 segments increased from the previous regulations)
An additional period of 1-2 years may be granted under certain requirements, among others: the business is done in an industrial area and / or the bonded area, using local raw materials component min.70%, absorbing Indonesian workers 500/1000 of people, the cost of R and D min.5%, business expansion was financed from profits after tax, min.30% of total export sales.
IMPORT DUTY FACILITY
MoF Reg No. 76/PMK.011/2012
Machinery, goods, materials for the production of 2-year or 4-year tax exemption for companies that use a machine with a local component (min.30%)
IndustryProducing goods and / or services, including:1.Tourism and culture2.Public transport3.Community health services4.Mining5.Construction6.Telecommunication7.Port8.Assembly industry of motor vehicles (including motor vehicle parts industry)
TAX HOLIDAY
Law No. 25/2007, GR No. 94/2010MoF Reg No. 159/PMK.010/2015
5-15~20
YearAmenities tax deductions, commencing from commercial production
10-100%
Reduction of corporate income tax from the amount of corporate income tax payable
Pioneers Industry:1. Metal Industry Upstream2. Petroleum Refining Industry3. Basic Organic Chemical Industry sourced
from Petroleum and Natural Gas4. Machinery Industry that produces industrial
machinery5. Manufacturing is based on Agriculture,
Forestry, and Fisheries6. Telecommunications Information and
Communication Industry7. Marine Transportation Industry8. Manufacturing Are the Primary Industry in
Special Economic Zones9. Infrastructure Economic Cooperation Scheme
Using other than the Government and Enterprises (KPBU)
IDR 1 TrillionMinimum Investment Plan
REGIONAL INCENTIVES
GR No. 45/2008
Local Government can provide local incentives, as follows:
Providing incentives can take the form: 1. Reductions, waivers, or local tax
exemption2. Reduction, relief or exemption
levies3. Funding stimulant4. The provision of capital
Provision of facilities can be:1. Provision of data and
information on investment opportunities
2. Providing facilities and infrastructure
3. The provision of land or location4. Providing technical assistance5. Acceleration in licensing
The Investment Coordinating Board of the Republic of Indonesia
50
1. Right of Ownership (“Hak Milik”) Certificate; freehold, only applied for Indonesian individuals.
2. Right to Manage (Hak Pengelolaan or “HPL”) Certificate; leasehold, only applied for Indonesian state-owned or regionalgovernment-owned enterprises.
3. Right to Cultivate (Hak Guna Usaha or “HGU”) Certificate; leasehold• Entitled for Indonesian Limited Liability Company (local, foreign, JV) to cultivate, harvest and own agribusiness products on the
purchased land.• Granted for the period of 35 years, can be extended to another 25 years, and renewable to 35 years.
4.Right to Build (Hak Guna Bangunan or ”HGB”) Certificate; leasehold• Entitled for Indonesian Limited Liability Company (local, foreign, JV) to build and own all
buildings and facilities on the purchased land.• Granted for the period of 30 years, can be extended to another 20 years, and renewable to 30
years.
5. Right to Use (“Hak Pakai”) Certificate; leasehold• Entitled for any Indonesian Limited Liability Company (local, foreign, JV), foreign individuals, foreign representative to use land
and own all buildings and facilities on the purchased land for office or house.• Granted for the period of 25 years, can be extended to another 20 years, and renewable to 25 years.
* The land titles are registered at the Regional Land Office (subordinate of the National Land Office, Badan Pertanahan Nasional or“BPN”).** Land transaction must be processed by a Land Deed Official (Pejabat Pembuat Akta Tanah or “PPAT). Most notaries are PPATofficials but PPAT officials need not be notaries. In rural areas, PPAT officials are often local government officials, such as the “camat”(a district head) or the head of the Regional Land Office, who has jurisdiction in the district in which the property is situated.
(Agrarian Law No. 5 1960)
LAND TITLE REGISTRATION
I n d o n e s i a I n v e s t m e n t C o o r d i n a t i n g B o a r d
EXISTING SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE (SEZ)
5
SeiMangkei- Palm Oil Processing Industry- Rubber Processing Industry- Fertilizer and Miscellaneous Industry- Logistic- Tourism
TanjungApi-Api- Rubber Processing Industry- Oil Processing Industry- Petrochemical Industry
TanjungLesung- Tourism
Mandalika- Tourism
Palu- Manufacture Industry- Agro Based Industry Cacao, Rubber,
Seaweed, Rattan- Manufacturing Nickel, Iron Ore, Gold- Logistic
Bitung- Fisheries Processing Industry- Coconut Based Industrial and Medicinal Plants- Various Industries- Logistic
MaloyBatutaTrans Kalimantan- Palm Oil Industry- Logistic
Morotai- Tourism
- Fisheries Processing Industry- Business and Logistic
Source: Bappenas, 2015
Supporting Infrastructure:- Toll Aceh Lampung (Plan)- Gas and electricity- Port
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation- Marina
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste
Installation
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation
Supporting Infrastructure:- Road- Electricity- Water and Waste Installation
I n d o n e s i a I n v e s t m e n t C o o r d i n a t i n g B o a r d
NEW SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE (SEZ)
5
TanjungLesung
Mandalika
MaloyBatutaTrans Kalimantan
Palu
Morotai
Bitung
SeiMangkei
Lhokseumawe- Manufacture- Shipyard
TanjungApi-Api
Padang-Pariaman- Agro Based Industry
Cacao, Rubber, palm oil
Tarakan- Manufacture
Industry
BatuLicin- Refinery - Metal Industry
Garombong- Refinery- Logistic- Petrochemical
Taka Bonerate- Tourism based Maritime
Raja Ampat- Tourism based Maritime
Sorong- Fisheries Processing Industry
Merauke- Food and Energy
Indusrty
Existing SEZsPlanned New SEZs
TelukBituni- Fertilizer and
Petrochemical Industry
Source: Bappenas, 2015