SINGAPORE (May 19): Following the recent announcement of renewed government funding for Indonesia’s B30 Biodiesel programme, CGS-CIMB analysts Ivy Ng and Nagulan Ravi have maintained their “neutral” call on upstream planters despite a positive outlook for downstream players due to a widening export levy between crude (CPO) and processed palm oil (PPO).
On May 18, Indonesia’s Finance Minister Sri Mulyani announced a renewal of the country’s B30 biodiesel mandate with a Rp2.78 trillion ($266.2 billion) government earmark and an increased palm oil export levy of US$5 ($7.10) to fund the programme. The scheme is expected to raise Rp3.54 trillion to maintain a 30% biodiesel blend in Indonesian diesel.
The B30 programme -- launched last December -- represents the highest mandatory mix in the world. The rationale of this requirement was to reduce carbon emissions, as well as Indonesia’s reliance on fuel imports. The government was considering a further B40 programme despite questions about the feasibility and logistics of such a requirement, though this has been postponed indefinitely owing to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Indonesia's oil palm plantation fund management agency (BPDPKS) supports the B30 mandate by bridging the gap between prices of conventional diesel and locally-produced palm oil biodiesel. Yet, price difference between these products has grown to Rp3732/litre as opposed to Rp444/litre in 2019. Reported to have only around Rp19 trillion at the end-December 2019, analysts estimate that BPDPKS may be unable to support the 9.6 million kilolitres of biodiesel needed to meet B30.
“The current government subsidy mechanism is already struggling to prop up the current B30 programme [while] palm oil premiums against gasoil (POGO) remain at three-year highs,” noted Lauren Moffitt for Argus Media, a London-based media firm analysing energy and commodity markets. BPDPKS obtains funding from Indonesia’s CPO export levy, which ranges from US$10-50 depending on prevailing CPO prices.
With Covid-19 seeing a reduction in diesel consumption in Indonesia, however, Ng and Ravi believe that Indonesia will be able to continue with B30 at least in the near-term. The analysts estimate that Indonesia’s biodiesel uptake is “13% below its targeted blend, at only 26.8% of its full-year allocated blending volume of 9.59 million kilolitres for 2020”. Indonesia will likely be 10% short of its biodiesel consumption target at 8.63m kilolitres as a result of the pandemic.
“We estimate BPDPKS may have spent Rp10.3 billion to fund the biodiesel programme from Jan 1 to May 17 and probably has around Rp8.7 billion funds left over from 2019. Taking the Rp20.3 trillion requirement, less the remaining carry-forward from last year’s fund of Rp8.7 trillion and the latest additional funding of Rp3.54 trillion, BPDPKS will need to collect Rp8.1 trillion from export levies. Based on a blended export volume of 15.2 million tonnes and export levy of US$36/tonne, we estimate that there will be sufficient funds to meet the B30 mandate,” they reported.
Ng and Ravi believe that CPO prices will benefit from the additional funding, as demand for biodiesel usage will be sustained by raising the country’s biodiesel usage to 8.63 million kilolitres from 6.26 million kilolitres in 2019.
These improved prices will likely offset an increased US$5/tonne in export levies for upstream planters, with the analysts issuing a “neutral” verdict for such operations. The levy, however, will likely benefit downstream palm oil players by incentivising exports of processed palm oil products, with both analysts issuing a “positive” call for downstream players.
Key Indonesia players with downstream exposure are Wilmar, First Resources and Golden Agri. As of the lunchtime close today, Wilmar International is currently trading at $3.89, First Resources at $1.31 and Golden Agri at just $0.14. CPO prices yesterday stood at RM2140 ($698.10).