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Indonesia still negotiating details, exemptions on US tariff deal, official says

Indonesia has asked the United States to exempt its exports of cocoa, rubber, crude palm oil, coffee and nickel from the levy.

  (Reuters)
Jakarta
Fri, July 18, 2025 Published on Jul. 18, 2025 Published on 2025-07-18T18:19:41+07:00

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Export oriented: Using a rubber-tired gantry crane, port workers load export-bound containers onto a vessel carrying Portuguese flag at Tanjung Mas port in Semarang on June 24, 2025. Export oriented: Using a rubber-tired gantry crane, port workers load export-bound containers onto a vessel carrying Portuguese flag at Tanjung Mas port in Semarang on June 24, 2025. (Antara/Aji Styawan)

I

ndonesia is still negotiating details of its recently-reached trade deal with the United States after Washington lowered tariff rates on the Southeast Asian country, and is pursuing exemptions for its exports of palm oil and nickel, an official said on Friday.

The two countries reached a trade deal this week that led to a reduction in the threatened US proposed tariff rate to 19 percent from 32 percent. The deal was one of only a handful reached so far by the Trump administration ahead of the August 1 negotiation deadline with numerous countries.

Susiwijono Moegiarso, a senior official at the country's economic ministry, told reporters that the two sides were still negotiating the finer details of the agreement, adding that the 19 percent rate will be imposed on top of existing sectoral tariffs.

Indonesia has asked the United States to exempt its exports of cocoa, rubber, crude palm oil, coffee and nickel from the levy, he said, adding that US technology products will also be exempted from Indonesia's "local content" rules, which require companies to use locally-made components in its manufacturing.

Indonesia is the world's biggest palm oil producer and the biggest supplier to the United States, accounting for 85 percent of its total imports in 2024.

"This is a good opportunity, this will become a good factor for us," Susiwijono said. "The deal should be good to support our exports."

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Indonesia will also buy jets for its flag carrier Garuda Indonesia from Boeing, and its state energy firm Pertamina will also import energy from the United States, subject to business reviews, Susiwijono said.

He added that all US goods imported into Indonesia will face zero tariffs, with the exception of alcoholic drinks and pork, and some US goods will be exempted from import quota rules.

A statement from Indonesia's economic ministry said the trade deal with US included agreement of easier import permits for US goods, protection of intellectual property rights, and for Indonesia to comply with international standard on export and import of goods with nuclear components.

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