{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 1813932,
        "msgid": "house-commission-xii-urges-pln-to-move-quickly-to-resolve-electricity-supply-issues-1781952670",
        "date": "2026-06-20 17:22:23",
        "title": "House Commission XII Urges PLN to Move Quickly to Resolve Electricity Supply Issues",
        "author": "",
        "source": "VIVA",
        "tags": "bisnis",
        "topic": "Energy",
        "summary": "House Commission XII Chairman Bambang Patijaya has called on state electricity firm PLN to accelerate efforts to resolve coal supply disruptions to power plants, despite the government allocating a 192 million tonne Domestic Market Obligation (DMO) for 2026. He noted that PLN's contracted supply currently stands at 134 million tonnes, leaving a 20 million tonne shortfall that must be secured by year-end. Patijaya stressed that reliable electricity is a strategic necessity impacting public activity, business, and the national investment climate.",
        "content": "<p>Chairman of House Commission XII, Bambang Patijaya, has urged PT PLN\n(Persero) to immediately take accelerated steps to address various\nobstacles causing disruptions to coal supplies for a number of power\nplants. He stated that from the perspective of national supply\navailability, the government has provided very adequate support through\nthe Domestic Market Obligation (DMO) policy. Bambang explained that the\ngovernment, through the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources, has\nset a DMO coal allocation of 192 million tonnes to meet domestic needs\nin 2026. This allocation is a coal supply assignment established by the\ngovernment for mining business permit holders through the Work Plan and\nBudget, specifically to guarantee the coal needs of the national\nelectricity sector, which is dominated by PLN. \u201cWith the DMO allocation\nof 192 million tonnes prepared by the government, there is actually no\nissue from the national coal supply availability side. PLN\u2019s coal\nrequirement this year is around 154 million tonnes, while the government\nhas assigned a much larger supply through the DMO scheme. Therefore, if\nthere are still supply constraints to the plants, PLN needs to move\nquickly to resolve the various obstacles occurring in the field,\u201d said\nBambang in his statement on Saturday, 20 June 2026. According to\nBambang, from the DMO allocation provided by the government, the\nrealisation of PLN\u2019s coal supply contracts to date has only reached\naround 134 million tonnes. This means there is still approximately 20\nmillion tonnes of demand that needs to be immediately secured through\ncontracts and supply absorption by the end of 2026. Therefore, PLN must\nbe more proactive in realising the supply allocated by the government to\nmeet the operational needs of its own power plants. He stated that PLN\nneeds to strengthen coordination with coal supplier companies, improve\nthe effectiveness of supply chain management, and ensure the\ndistribution and logistics system runs optimally. These steps are\nimportant so that the coal supply allocated by the government can be\nproperly absorbed and distributed to all power plants. Bambang\nemphasised that the reliability of electricity supply is a strategic\nnecessity that directly impacts community activities, the business\nworld, and the national investment climate. Therefore, any potential\ndisruption to the primary energy supply must be anticipated and resolved\nquickly.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/house-commission-xii-urges-pln-to-move-quickly-to-resolve-electricity-supply-issues-1781952670",
        "image": ""
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}