ASIATODAY.ID, JAKARTA – Indonesia is no longer just an emerging-market investment destination. It has become a battleground for global capital, as nickel and smelter industries sit at the heart of the world’s energy transition and geopolitical rivalry.
According to Indonesia’s Ministry of Investment and Downstreaming, total downstream investment in 2025 reached IDR 584.1 trillion, a 43.3% year-on-year surge, accounting for 30.2% of total national investment. The figures underscore a strategic shift: downstreaming is now a core instrument of Indonesia’s economic and geopolitical leverage.
Nickel Remains the Main Battlefield
Despite government efforts to diversify, foreign investors remain heavily concentrated in nickel and strategic minerals.
In 2025 alone, the mineral sector absorbed IDR 373.1 trillion, the largest share of downstream investment.
Indonesia holds the world’s largest nickel reserves, making it indispensable to the electric vehicle (EV) battery supply chain and the broader clean-energy ecosystem.
“Mineral downstreaming remains dominant because it requires advanced technology and large-scale capital,” said Rosan Perkasa Roeslani, Minister of Investment and Head of BKPM on January 15, 2026.
Singapore Controls Capital, China Shifts to Technology
Contrary to common perception, Singapore—not China—emerged as the largest investor in Indonesia’s downstream sector in 2025. The top five foreign investors were:
Singapore – US$ 7.9 billion
Hong Kong (China) – US$ 6.2 billion
China – US$ 4.8 billion
Malaysia – US$ 3.0 billion
United States – US$ 1.6 billion
Singapore has positioned itself as the financial gateway for global capital flows, while China is increasingly pivoting toward technology transfer and R&D.
Several Chinese firms have relocated research, recycling technology, and patent ownership to Indonesia, signaling a deeper industrial footprint beyond pure investment.
Smelters and ESG Become the New Entry Ticket
As global scrutiny intensifies, Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards have become non-negotiable. International investors now demand low-emission nickel smelters, cleaner energy inputs, and stronger social and environmental compliance.
Projects that fail to meet ESG benchmarks risk exclusion from Western EV and clean-energy supply chains, particularly in the United States and Europe.
“Incentives are no longer just about capital inflows, but about technology transfer, sustainability, and long-term value creation,” Rosan emphasized.
Geopolitical Investment: Indonesia at the Center
The surge in downstream investment reflects a reordering of global nickel geopolitics. Indonesia now sits at the intersection of China’s industrial strategy, ASEAN’s financial networks, and Western efforts to secure non-China supply chains.
Singapore acts as the capital conduit, China as the manufacturing and technology partner, while the United States and its allies push for green, ESG-compliant nickel to power the energy transition.
Downstreaming as Indonesia’s Long-Term Bet
With 73.5% of downstream investment coming from foreign direct investment (IDR 429.6 trillion), the Indonesian government is clear: downstreaming is not a short-term policy—it is a strategic economic weapon.
In a world of intensifying capital competition, nickel, smelters, and ESG standards now form a single strategic package—one that will determine whether Indonesia remains a production base or rises as a global industrial and technological power. (ATN)
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