009. South Korea’s Korindo Group is planning to invest $500 million in a factory on Kalimantan Island, Indonesia, with the capacity to process 600 thousand tons of pulp annually for particle board and paper.

Wood Pulp

South Korean Korindo Group plans to invest $500 million in factory on Kalimantan Island, Indonesia

Mar 06, 2009. /Lesprom Network/. South Korea’s Korindo Group is planning to invest $500 million in a factory on Kalimantan Island, Indonesia, with the capacity to process 600 thousand tons of pulp annually for particle board and paper, as The Jakarta Globe informed Lesprom Network. The announcement was made by Kim Hoon, Korindo’s executive director. The factory is scheduled to get underway over the next two years, Kim said, after signing a memorandum of understanding between Indonesia and South Korea. The signing was witnessed by the Indonesian Forestry Minister MS Kaban and Chung Kwang-soo, Korea’s minister of forest service. “We will use acacia mangium and eucalyptus as raw materials,” Kim said. Acacia mangium is found in Papua New Guinea, Maluku Province and in Australia. Some varieties can grow to 20 meters in less than a decade. Eucalyptus trees are mainly native to Australia. Korindo is licensed to manage 170 thousand hectares of plantation forest, most of it in Kalimantan. The company has already planted 78 thousand hectares as raw material, Kim said. He acknowledged that investors faced problems, including the lack of adequate infrastructure and jurisdictional questions between the central government and regional administrations. “It happens that infrastructure in some districts cannot support the industry,” Kim said, adding that some potential investment areas did not have roads. After the MOU signing, Kaban said the ministry had also granted forestry licenses to two other South Korean companies, PT Taiyoung Engreen and PT Inni Joa. He pledged to aid investors seeking to get involved in forestry. “Investment in forestry plantation is large-scale,” he said. “For example investment in sengon (fast-growing species of wood found in East Java Province) requires about Rp 12 million ($996 million) a hectare,” Kaban said, adding that ministry support would be required, without elaborating on how assistance would be offered. Aside from supporting the large-scale forestry industry, the ministry is making an inventory of forest areas belonging to local residents, he said.