Illustration of Indonesian officials overseeing export reporting for coal, palm oil, and ferroalloy under new DSI regulations starting June 2026.
Illustration of Indonesian officials overseeing export reporting for coal, palm oil, and ferroalloy under new DSI regulations starting June 2026.
Image generated by AI

Government starts natural resource export reporting via DSI

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Starting June 1 2026, natural resource exporters must report activities to PT Danantara Sumber Daya Indonesia. The new mechanism covers coal, palm oil, and ferroalloy during the transition period.

Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto stated that reporting will be done through the CEISA 4.0 platform of the Directorate General of Customs and Excise. Exporters can continue operations as usual but must submit data to DSI.

Airlangga explained the policy strengthens oversight and prevents under-invoicing and transfer pricing. The three commodities contributed US$66.13 billion in exports in 2025, or 23.4 percent of national exports.

Danantara Indonesia COO Dony Oskaria affirmed that DSI formation adds no new bureaucracy. During the six-month transition until December 2026, the government will discuss pricing benchmarks with businesses before full implementation on January 1 2027.

Luke Thomas Mahony has been appointed DSI President Director, with other executives to be announced next week. The government hopes the step will improve transparency and state revenue.

What people are saying

Initial reactions on X are mostly neutral, with official and media accounts sharing details on the new DSI reporting requirement for coal, palm oil, and ferroalloy exports starting June 1 2026. One user expressed skepticism about potential negative effects on palm oil exporters and TBS purchases. Another highlighted benefits like preventing under-invoicing.

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