US, Japan-Led Climate Pact Set to Offer Indonesia $15 Billion

The US, Japan and other countries will offer a climate finance deal worth as much as $20 billion to help Indonesia shift its coal-dominated power grid away from the polluting fossil fuel.

Details of an agreement will be announced during the Group of 20 meetings in Bali next week after talks between US President Joe Biden and Indonesian President Joko Widodo, Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Panjaitan said Friday. He confirmed an earlier Bloomberg News report that the deal will be at least $15 billion.

The “just energy transition partnership,” or JETP, pact with Japan, the US and others follows roughly a year of negotiations and could be announced as soon as Tuesday, according to people familiar with the plans, who asked not to be named because the details aren’t yet public.

A spokesperson for the US Treasury Department and Japan’s finance ministry declined to comment.

Tugboats guide barges transporting coal on Mahakam River in Samarinda, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021. Coal prices are likely to remain high after soaring to new records on strengthening power demand and challenges in key supplier nations, according to a major Australian producer.

The deal would enable Indonesia to accelerate efforts to shutter excess fossil fuel generation capacity, and to limit its pipeline of coal power projects, factors that are currently thwarting the development of renewable energy, the people said.