BSS
  26 Sep 2023, 10:30

Indonesia launches first carbon exchange

JAKARTA, Sept 26, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - Indonesia launched its first carbon
exchange on Tuesday, giving companies a chance to offset their emissions as
Jakarta pledges to reach carbon neutrality in its power sector by 2050.

The country is one of the world's biggest polluters and there has been scant
progress on a multi-billion-dollar investment plan agreed with the United
States and European nations last year to wean the archipelago off coal.

The government has lauded the exchange as a way to reduce emissions towards
reaching the country's climate goals by the 2050 deadline agreed under the
$20 billion Just Energy Transition Partnership at the Indonesia-hosted G20
summit in November.

"I want to congratulate OJK (Financial Services Authority), BEI (Indonesia
Stock Exchange) and related authorities for the launch of the first carbon
exchange in Indonesia, marking the beginning of carbon trading in our
country," President Joko Widodo said at the launch.

"This is Indonesia's real contribution to fight with the world against the
climate crisis."

He said the emissions trading market would help Indonesia reach its target
climate pledges agreed under the 2015 Paris Agreement to help prevent global
warming past 1.5 degrees Celsius.

"Concrete steps are needed to address this, and the carbon exchange that we
launch today can be a concrete step," he said.

The Indonesian leader added that the exchange could create a new sustainable
economy, estimating it had the potential to be worth at least 3,000 trillion
rupiah ($194 billion).

The trading will take place on the Indonesia Stock Exchange and it will be
overseen by the Financial Services Authority.

At least 13 transactions took place at the start of Tuesday's trade, with
more than the equivalent of 459,000 tons of carbon dioxide traded, according
to a board at the stock exchange.

OJK chairman Mahendra Siregar said authorities hoped 99 coal-fired power
plants would take part in the new exchange, around 86 percent of the total
operating in the country.

Indonesia is the biggest coal exporter in the world and environmentalists
have questioned the government's commitment to its climate pledges as it
continues to build coal-fired power plants it had already commissioned.

They have blamed more than half a dozen such plants around capital Jakarta
for pollution spikes that have hit the city in recent weeks.