Indonesia’s aluminium downstream: Following nickel into a captive coal boom

🇮🇩 Versi Bahasa Indonesia tersedia di bawah

Key findings

  • Under Indonesia’s downstreaming mandate, total alumina production capacity is projected to quadruple from 7 million tonnes in 2025 to 32.5 million tonnes by 2030, driven almost entirely by Smelter-Grade Alumina. Meanwhile, Chemical-Grade Alumina remains flat at 300,000 tonnes, proving investments target primary metals over high-value specialty products.
  • This rapid expansion risks both immediate feedstock gridlock and long-term exhaustion: slow-scaling mining cannot instantly match skyrocketing demand, which is estimated to jump from 14 to 65 million tonnes of bauxite ore annually and potentially deplete Indonesia’s proven 1 billion tonne reserve base in under 12 years.
  • Indonesia’s aluminium downstreaming is set to be powered with 9.8 GW of captive coal power capacity, with 1.8 GW operational and a further 8 GW highly likely linked to 32 prospective projects, repeating a similar lock-in legacy the nickel boom brings.
  • Roughly 75% of Indonesia’s domestic alumina and aluminium projects are tied to Chinese backing. This inflow is driven by China’s strict output cap reaching its threshold, forcing Chinese industrial giants to offshore capital.
  • The government’s push for domestic aluminium self-sufficiency is shown in a massive expansion in Mempawah, West Kalimantan, to be fully funded by state-owned superholding, Danantara. The project is opting for 1.25 GW of captive coal over cost-effective clean energy such as solar and storage, a pivot from the global shift toward low-carbon commodities that could permanently derail the sector’s emission trajectory.

Figure — Indonesia alumina-aluminum projects overview: production capacity and captive coal power generation

Figure Indonesia’s bauxite refinery capacities, current in 2025 and projected in 2030 (top) and all known developments by current project status (bottom)

Figure Ratio of alumina and aluminium production power sources

Author(s): Syahdiva Moezbar; Katherine Hasan

Indonesia