Source: Reuters, December 10 2019 

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia is aiming to start making lithium batteries for use in electric vehicles in 2023, alongside plants that are already slated to produce chemicals used in the batteries, according to the minister who oversees the energy and mining ministry.

Coordinating Minister for Maritime and Investment Affairs Luhut Pandjaitan said he wants investors to start putting money into plants to make batteries alongside the plants that will soon be producing battery chemicals extracted from nickel ore. 

“We are in coordination with GEM and CATL to build lithium battery plants in Indonesia,” Pandjaitan told reporters, referring to Chinese battery firm GEM Co Ltd and Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd. 

The companies and their partners, which include stainless steel maker Tsingshan Holding Group, are building Indonesia’s first plant to produce battery chemicals.

Pandjaitan said the government is looking at Patimban in West Java as a potential location for building battery plants. 

“I asked them to work on this at the same time (with the battery chemical plants),” he said. 

“In 2023, everything must be finished.” 

GEM expects to start trial production at its Indonesian battery chemicals plant in August 2020, with the first phase of operations up and running by the end of next year, its president said in November. 

Reporting by Wilda Asmarini; Writing by Fransiska Nangoy; Editing by Tom Hogue