KPC refuses to lower price of its 51 pct stake: Report

Tuesday, July 31 2001 - 04:23 AM WIB

East Kalimantan-based company Kaltim Prima Coal (KPC) insisted that the local administration should pay US$448.8 million for its 51 percent stake, The Jakarta Post reported on Tuesday.

Anglo-Australian mining firm Rio Tinto Indonesia, one of the coal producer?s major shareholders, said that KPC had no intention of cutting the price, as demanded by both the local and central governments.

?We don?t have any plan to lower the price,? Rio Tinto spokeswoman Nunik Maulana was quoted as saying by the Post.

Nunik said the price tag for the 51 percent stake was fair because its calculation considered several factors, including the size of the existing coal reserve and future prices for the commodity.

After tough negotiations, KPC which operates a huge coal mine in Sangatta, Kutai Timur Regency, agreed early this year to sell 51 percent of its stake to local investors in order to meet the mandatory divestment program imposed by the government on foreign mining companies.

The East Kalimantan provincial administration is the only party who has bid for the stake.

KPC?s valuation of its 51 percent stake is much higher that the US$309.94 million calculated by the ministry of energy and mineral resources and the $319 million appraisal of the East Kalimantan administration.

Both the ministry and the local administration demanded that the KPC lower its price but the company has so for refused.

The three parties have conducted several meetings, the last of which was chaired by Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro last Thursday in Jakarta, in an attempt to renegotiate the price of the stake. However, no resolution to the stalemate was reached.

Nunik said that KPC had asked the government to appoint two separate appraisers for each party to determine a fair price of the stake, but the government has not yet responded to the request.

The provincial administration has reportedly objected to the establishment of a joint independent appraiser, describing it as a tactic of KPC aimed at delaying its investment program.

Local councilors at the provincial level have asked the government to terminate KPC?s mining contract, but their colleagues in the Kutai Timur Regency have opposed the move.

Nunik said that KPC has not persuaded any councilors of the Kutai Timur regency to reject the proposal.

?We have a good relationship with the regency?s legislature as well as other institutions because we do business there, that?s all,? she said.

KPC, which has about 10,000 workers, produces an average of 50,000 tons of coal a day, or 15 million tons a year.

KPC is equally owned by Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto and Anglo-American energy giant BP Plc. (*)

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