JAKARTA (April 9): Indonesia's palm oil industry and farmer groups on Wednesday urged the government to reduce export costs, to offset the impact of market distortion caused by 32% US reciprocal tariffs on Indonesia's exports.
Palm smallholders' group SPKS called on the government to lower costs by removing an export tax and levy, saying the US tariff would result in an up to 3% fall in the price farmers receive for palm fresh fruit bunches.
"SPKS estimated President Trump's tariffs will distort demand for CPO and palm oil products," the group's chairman Sabarudin said in a statement.
"The drop in prices at farmers' level could be offset by the reduction of export tax and levy down to 0% to help stabilise prices of palm fruits," he added. Indonesia collects a total of US$196 per metric tonne export tax and levy on crude palm oil shipments
Already on Tuesday, Indonesia said it would adjust its palm oil export tax, which should reduce the burden of the US tariffs on exporters "by an equivalent of 5%".
While the SPKS urged reducing the costs to zero, Indonesia's largest palm oil group Gapki said it is waiting to see what the impact of the reduction will be on costs, the group chairman Eddy Martono said.
He said domestic market obligations, and the palm oil export tax and levy currently increase costs by US$221 per tonne for Indonesian palm oil exporters.
That compared to an estimated US$140 per tonne export cost borne by rival Malaysian exporters.
Following the US tariffs, Gapki said it has proposed a US$100 per tonne cost reduction for shipments specifically to the US, to maintain competitiveness against exports from Malaysia.
"If it is not competitive yet, we will talk to the government... We are not asking this for all export markets, just for this one country," Martono said.
The US, Indonesia's fourth largest palm oil export market, accounted for about 7% of palm oil export volume and revenue in 2023.
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