Commodities

Indonesia Cuts Palm Oil Levy to Be Competitive and Boost Exports

A worker harvests palm oil fruit at the Cikasungka palm oil plantation, operated by PT Perkebunan Nusantara VIII, in Bogor Regency in West Java, Indonesia, on Monday, June 20, 2022. Indonesia has slashed the maximum crude palm oil export levy by nearly half in another step to speed up shipments after lifting a temporary export ban on the commodity last month. (Dimas Ardian/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Indonesia reduced its export levy on palm oil in a bid to boost shipments of the tropical commodity.

The world’s biggest grower set the crude palm oil levy at 7.5% of the reference price, according to a decree posted on the finance ministry’s website. The new rule, effective from Sept. 21, will cut the duty to $63 per ton from $90 for September. The levy for processed palm products will be between 3% and 6%. 

The changes will help the Southeast Asian nation become more competitive than neighboring Malaysia, the second-largest producer. That could add further pressure on benchmark palm oil futures, which have fallen more than 10% in Kuala Lumpur since a high in April.

Indonesia collects an export tax and an additional levy on palm exports. The levy, which is utilized to fund replanting programs and provide biodiesel subsidies, was previously being set every month in US dollars. The reference rate — a weighted average based on palm oil prices - is set every month by the trade ministry to calculate export duties.

New Levy Rates:

(Updates to add a table at the bottom.)

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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