JAKARTA (Antara): The government will maximize the use of local resources in building coal-fired power plants outside Java currently in bidding process, a senior official at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources said Tuesday.
"The local potentials include goods, manpower as well as funding," said the ministry's director general of electricity and energy utilization J Purwono.
"We will ask the contractors to use local resources including machineries, construction materials and manpower although the funding come from foreign sources, which usually are binding ones," he added.
Purwono pointed to the construction of a foreign-funded 7 megawatts (MW) coal-fired power plant which could use up to 30 percent of local content.
He also called local financial institutions to be proactive in funding power plant projects saying it could be a market for local lenders.
"Indonesian banks should also compete to finance power projects. Don't be passive," he said.
The government has announced on Dec. 19 a tender for the construction of 25 coal-fired power plants outside Java.
Four power plants will have the capacity of 100 to 200 MW to be built in Aceh, North Sumatra, West Sumatra and Lampung provinces.
Another four power plants with 50-65 MW of capacity slated for West Kalimantan, South Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan and South Sulawesi provinces.
There are also 17 plants with smaller capacities of 7 to 25 MW scattered nation wide in Bangka Belitung, Riau, Riau Islands, West Kalimantan, Maluku, North Maluku, Papua, East Nusa Tenggara,West Nusa Tenggara, Gorontalo, Southeast Sulawesi and North Sulawesi provinces.
These power plants are part of the government's plan to generate additional 10,000 MW of electricity by 2009.
As for Java island, the government has started bidding process for 10 power plants. Seven power plants will the capacity of 300 to 400 MW while the remaining three with 600 to 700 MW of capacity.
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