JAKARTA (Reuters) -Indonesia is considering setting a mandatory bioethanol content level for gasoline of 10% in a bid to lower carbon emissions and reduce the country’s dependence on fuel imports, state news agency Antara reported on Tuesday, citing the energy minister.
Indonesia’s government is seeking to expand the use of biofuels made from palm oil and sugar cane as President Prabowo Subianto pushes the world’s fourth-most populous nation to become more energy self-sufficient. However, a mandatory bioethanol mix for gasoline has faced implementation delays due to limited ethanol supplies.
“We had a meeting with the president yesterday evening. The president had agreed over the 10% bioethanol mandatory plan,” energy minister Bahlil Lahadalia was quoted as saying.
State energy firm Pertamina’s CEO Simon Aloysius Mantiri said the company was ready to help implement the plan, according to the Antara report.
Indonesia had the capacity to produce 303,325 kilolitres of bioethanol per year in 2024, but output stood at 160,946 kL with imports at 11,829 kL, according to data from Apsendo, an association of Indonesian methylated spirits and ethanol producers.
Domestic demand for bioethanol stood at 125,937 kL last year while exports reached 46,839 kL.
(Reporting by Ananda Teresia and Fransisca Nangoy; Editing by Joe Bavier)