Exporters to stop shipments from that date regardless of standing contracts JAKARTA: Indonesia said on Monday it will stop nickel ore exports from Jan. 1, 2020, two years earlier than initially flagged as it speeds up efforts to process more of its resources at home. Bambang Gatot Ariyono, the Mining Ministry’s director general for coal and minerals, said the ban will be applicable to all grades of nickel ore and ordered exporters to stop shipments from that date regardless of standing contracts. “That is why we are announcing now so they have four months of transition time,” Ariyono told reporters. Speculation about an expedited ban and Monday’s announcement has boosted nickel prices. The three-month nickel contract on the London Metal Exchange gained 3 percent to $18,470 a ton on Monday, its highest in nearly five years, adding to Friday’s 9 percent gain. Goldman Sachs said in a note on Sunday it expects London nickel prices to reach $20,000 per ton in three months due to the ban. Ariyono said the timetable was expedited because of the limited pool of mineable nickel resources in the country. “The national proven reserve for nickel is only 698 million tons, which can only supply smelting facilities for 7.3 years,” he told reporters, adding that Indonesia currently has 11 working smelters with input capacity of 24 million tons of ore. It has 25 more smelting facilities in the pipeline. The government had initially said it would ban nickel ore exports from January 2022, according to a rule released in 2017. It is retaining that later date for the end of exports of bauxite and copper concentrates. Indonesian President Joko Widodo in Parliament last month vowed to push for adding value to the country’s natural resources exports. Philippine nickel miners said they are likely to boost output of nickel ore next year to fill up supply gap left by Indonesia.
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