Environmental fears over $7.64b Indonesia EV battery project: NGOs
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Non-governmental organisations say Indonesia and the Chinese firms involved have not given assurances about environmental protections at the site.
PHOTO: AFP
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JAKARTA – Environmental groups raised concerns on June 26 over a US$6 billion (S$7.64 billion) Indonesian electric vehicle battery megaproject backed by Chinese giant CATL, which is set to open on a once-pristine island, as Jakarta exploits its huge supply of nickel.
Indonesia is both the world’s largest nickel producer and home to the biggest-known reserves, and a 2020 export ban has spurred a domestic industrial boom.
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto will inaugurate the project – also backed by China’s Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt and Indonesia’s state-owned Antam – in the east of Halmahera on Maluku islands on June 29.
The complex will cover a process from nickel mining to production of cathodes, state news agency Antara reported.
But non-governmental organisations say Indonesia and the Chinese firms involved have not given assurances about environmental protections at the site, located just kilometres from a huge industrial park where spikes in pollution and deforestation have been reported.
“CATL, Huayou Cobalt, PT Antam...must commit to respecting the rights of local communities and the environment before breaking ground,” said Mr Brad Adams, executive director at Climate Rights International (CRI), in a statement.
“Communities are repressed, forests are cleared, and pollution goes unaddressed with impunity. This is a chance for the Prabowo government to show that it has learnt from those failures.”
The presidential office did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.
Halmahera hosts the world’s largest nickel mine by production, Weda Bay, where operations have grown and sparked reports of widespread environmental damage.
Greenpeace Indonesia said the new project carried “great responsibilities” and the environment and locals “must not take a back seat” to powering electric vehicles.
Forest campaign team leader at Greenpeace Arie Rompas told AFP: “If the environment and the rights of our most vulnerable people are not prioritised now...we will all pay a high price through worsening biodiversity and climate crises.”
A CRI report in June warned the Indonesian government was allowing environmental damage to go unchecked around Weda Bay.
An AFP report in May detailed how the home of the nomadic Hongana Manyawa tribe was being eaten away by the mine. AFP

