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Indonesia, Toyota in talks on potential bioethanol project

By Thomson Reuters Apr 20, 2026 | 1:04 AM

JAKARTA, April 20 (Reuters) – Indonesia is in talks with Japan’s Toyota Motor Asia on a potential joint investment in bioethanol production in the Southeast ​Asian country, a government official and executives from ‌Toyota told reporters on Monday.

Here are some details:

• A renewable energy subsidiary of Indonesia’s state energy firm Pertamina is discussing potential joint investment with Toyota Tsusho for a bioethanol plant in Indonesia’s ‌Lampung ​province on the southern tip ⁠of Sumatra, said Deputy ⁠Investment Minister Todotua Pasaribu.

• If they reach a deal, construction on a plant with capacity of 60,000 kilolitres of bioethanol per annum could start in the second ​half of 2026, with production eyed in 2028, he said.

• A new 6,000-hectare (around 14,800 acres) sorghum plantation ⁠will produce the feedstock, Pasaribu ⁠said.

• The estimated total cost of the ​investment is $200 million-$300 million, he said.

• Japan’s Research Association of ​Biomass Innovation for Next Generation Automobile Fuels (raBit) is ‌involved in the talks, Pasaribu said.

• Speaking alongside Pasaribu, Masahiko Maeda, Toyota Motor Asia’s chief executive for the Asia region, said Toyota vehicles could use the bioethanol ⁠produced in the Lampung plant.

• Pras Ganesh, an executive vice president of Toyota Motor Asia, told Reuters on the sidelines of ⁠the press ‌conference that discussions were still underway and ⁠a deal has not been reached.

• Indonesia ​has ‌set a target to produce bioethanol using ​domestically available ⁠sources such as biomass from palm oil, corn and sorghum to reduce its reliance on imported fuels.

• The country plans to impose mandatory 10% bioethanol content in gasoline in 2028.

(Reporting by Stefanno SulaimanWriting by Gayatri Suroyo; Editing ​by David Stanway)