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Major Indonesia nickel plant cuts output as waste piles up

HPAL producers have also been contending with the higher cost of sulphur, a chemical used to produce acid

    • Indonesia accounts for more than half of the world’s output of nickel, a metal used in electric-vehicle batteries and stainless steel.
    • Indonesia accounts for more than half of the world’s output of nickel, a metal used in electric-vehicle batteries and stainless steel. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Tue, Nov 25, 2025 · 11:18 AM

    [SINGAPORE] A majority Chinese-owned plant at Indonesia’s most important nickel site is cutting back production as its tailings site is nearly full, according to sources familiar with the matter, highlighting the industry’s growing waste management challenge.

    Output at QMB New Energy Materials will be lower for at least two weeks, according to the sources, who asked not to be named as they are not authorised to speak publicly. QMB counts China’s GEM and Tsingshan Holding Group among its shareholders.

    A representative of Indonesia Morawali Industrial Park on Sulawesi island, the country’s largest such facility and home to QMB, confirmed the reduction in run rates. The plant’s tailings storage inside the park is almost full, and paperwork for another location is still being processed, the representative added.

    GEM, QMB’s biggest investor, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Indonesia accounts for more than half of the world’s output of nickel, a metal used in electric-vehicle batteries and stainless steel, thanks to a surge in production that’s been driven by investment from China. The high-pressure acid leaching (HPAL) method used by the plants allows the use of lower-grade ore and is relatively cheap, but it results in high volumes of waste, which is typically dried and compacted before being stored.

    The rapid expansion of the nickel industry is facing greater local scrutiny in Indonesia, partly due to waste-related concerns. Experts have questioned whether the HPAL method can ever be used safely and sustainably in the tropical archipelago, where torrential rain and earthquakes are frequent. A deadly landslide at QMB’s tailings site at the Morawali park resulted in disruptions to output earlier this year.

    HPAL producers have also been contending with the higher cost of sulphur, a chemical used to produce acid.

    Still, demand for mixed hydroxide precipitate, a form of nickel produced at the HPAL plants that also contains cobalt, has benefited from a tailwind this year following the imposition of cobalt export controls by the Democratic Republic of Congo. BLOOMBERG

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