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Indonesia disciplines mining companies for failing to report regularly for the first time

印尼首次处分未定期报告采矿企业

The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (MEMR), through the General Directorate of Mines and Coal (DGM), has issued the first administrative warning sanction to 2,867 companies holding mining service business licenses (IUJP).According to a recent letter from the General Directorate of Mines and Coal, the sanctions were imposed because the companies failed to comply with their quarterly periodic reporting obligations. The letter specifies two core requirements: first, companies holding IUJPs are required to submit quarterly reports to the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources or the governor with the corresponding authority, at the latest within 15 calendar days after the end of each quarter.

Secondly, according to the "Regulations on the Process of Preparation, Submission and Approval of Work Plans and Budgets for Mineral and Coal Mining Operations and the Process of Reporting on the Implementation of Activities", those who fail to comply with the reporting obligations will be subject to administrative sanctions in the form of a written warning. The letter mentions thatAs of September 29, 2025The relevant enterprises have still not submittedPeriodic report for the first quarter of 2025The

As a result, the General Directorate of Mines and Coal decided to impose a first administrative warning and require the enterprise toFulfilment of obligations as soon as possibleThe law is not a matter of law, but a matter of avoiding exposure to the law.Follow-up sanctions. The communication was sent byDirector General of Mines and CoalSigned on behalf of the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources, with an annex listing the first administrative warnings imposedEnterprise ListThe

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