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Indonesia
has been warned it may not fully benefit from its recent investment grade status
to draw significant offshore funding if it fails to impress investors looking
for environmentally sustainable investments.
Two
international rating agencies have in the past month granted Southeast Asia’s
largest economy investment-grade status, improving its chances of attracting
long-term foreign funds.
However,
Elmar Bouma, the director of the Indonesia Netherlands Association, cautioned
that pension funds and investment managers, which together account for an
estimated $30 trillion in capital, had strict sustainability requirements in
line with the UN Principles for Responsible Investment.
“Its hard
to say how much of that would come to Indonesia, because they apply much
stricter standard regarding sustainability,” Bouma told a news conference on
Thursday.
Data from
Towers Watson and UNPRI’s Web site show that big funds include Norway’s
Government Pension Fund Global, the world’s second-largest sovereign fund with
more than $550 billion in assets, and South Korea’s National Pension, the
world’s third largest with around $290 billion.
Indonesia,
with its $706 billion economy, is fast becoming a magnet for foreign investors
as its growth continues amid a global crisis marked by European debt and the US
economic slowdown.
Indonesia’s
prudent fiscal and monetary position, coupled with its demographic bonus — a
productive population that outnumbers its unproductive one — provides a
foundation for accelerating growth over the next decade.
“Indonesia
promises growth in the long term, but the scope of those pension funds is
longer,” said Poltak Hotradero, the head of research at the Indonesia Stock
Exchange.
Bouma said
Indonesia’s banking system should take the
initiative to spearhead sustainable banking practices. There are 120
commercial banks operating in Indonesia.
“The
banking sector of Indonesia must anticipate this development to tap the new
source capital,” he said.
Sakariza
Qori Hermawan, group head of corporate sustainability at Bank Negara Indonesia,
said Bank Indonesia, the central bank, may soon issue a regulation on green
banking.
Lenders would
be required to assess customers based on social and environmental
sustainability standards as well as financial.
Thus far,
he said, social and environmental sustainability were low priorities for
Indonesia’s banks and businesses.
Sakariza
said his Jakarta-based lender had only disbursed Rp 7.7 trillion ($862.4
million) in “green category” loans in 2010, or around 5.7 percent of its total
outstanding loans valued at Rp 136.4 trillion. Some green loans financed
geothermal power plants.
“Looking
for excellent green companies is quite hard,” he said.
Sakariza
said green banking would force corporations to comply with the UNPRI framework.
Rubin
Japhta, a senior officer at the International Finance Corporation, said
Indonesian companies and banks would need time to change their business
paradigm.
While
waiting for the shift, he said, Indonesian banks could try to tap the funds
while committing themselves to transformation along the way.
The IFC,
the investment arm of the Washington-based World Bank, has implemented these
“flexible” policies with its investment partners in Indonesia including Bank
Tabungan Pensiunan Negara, Bank Maybank Indonesia, Hana Bank and Bank Danamon.

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