State-owned fertilizer company PT Pupuk Sriwidjaja (Pusri)
in Palembang, South Sumatra, has started the construction of a new
fertilizer plant worth US$561 million.
The construction project is
jointly being carried out by a consortium comprising PT Rekayasa
Industri and Toyo Engineering Corporation and is supported by six banks:
BCA, BJB, BNI, Mandiri, SumselBabel and UOB Indonesia.
Pusri
president director Musthofa said on Monday that construction was due to
be completed by 2015. "The new fertilizer factory will hopefully
increase the company's daily production capacity to 2,000 tons of
ammonium and 2,750 tons of urea," he said.
The ground-breaking ceremony was held on Monday to mark the start of construction on six hectares of land.
Musthofa
said the new factory would be powered by a coal-powered electricity
plant, enabling it to save up to 17 million metric standard cubic feet
per day (mmscfd) of natural gas it normally used on energy.
Meanwhile,
State-Owned Enterprises Minister Dahlan Iskan said he appreciated
efforts to replace the factory’s energy source from natural gas to coal.
“South Sumatra is a province with the largest amount of coal reserves in Indonesia,” he said.
Dahlan
further said that the fertilizer plant had a very strategic position in
improving the prosperity of farmers in the country.
“Only farmers
who use quality fertilizer can yield quality harvests, which are needed
to strengthen national rice reserves,” said Dahlan. (asw/ebf) (Ansyor Idrus, The Jakarta Post, Palembang | Archipelago | Mon, April 08 2013, 8:51 PM)
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