Indonesia, EU sign long-awaited trade deal

BSS
Published On: 23 Sep 2025, 11:04 Updated On:23 Sep 2025, 11:07

DENPASAR, Indonesia, Sept 23, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Indonesia and the European Union finalised negotiations on a trade agreement Tuesday after nearly a decade of negotiations, a senior minister said.

The Indonesia-European Union Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is the third deal Brussels has signed with Southeast Asian countries, after Singapore and Vietnam.

The pact was signed by EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic and Indonesian Minister of Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto in Bali and will open investments in strategic sectors such as electric vehicles, electronics, and pharmaceuticals.

"By finalising this agreement, the EU and Indonesia are sending a powerful message to the world that we stand united in our commitment to open rules-based and mutually beneficial international trade," Sefcovic said after the signing.

"In all, EU exporters will save some 600 million euros ($708 million) a year in duties paid on their goods entering the Indonesian market, and European products will be more affordable and available to Indonesian consumers." EU President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement.

- The right moment -

Indonesia has been in talks with the EU since 2016, but negotiations for a trade deal initially saw little progress.

Issues such as palm oil and deforestation posed stumbling blocks, but US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariff policy "created the urgency" to expedite an agreement, said Deni Friawan, researcher at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

President Prabowo Subianto travelled to Brussels in July and announced with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen that the two sides had reached a "political agreement" to conclude the deal after 19 rounds of negotiations.

Indonesian chief economic minister Airlangga Hartarto said uncertainties caused by the "tariff war and protectionism" between major countries pushed the two sides "to seek certainty through a stable bilateral agreement".

The agreement was expected to "mitigate risks from the impact of the global tariff war", Airlangga told AFP in a statement.

"This signing came at the right moment. It was finalised because of Donald Trump's tariff war, and we need to seek an alternative market in Europe, and Europe has the same interest, they need a market to penetrate," Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara, executive director of the Center of Economic and Law Studies, told AFP.

Around 80 percent of Indonesian exports to the EU will be tariff-free after the deal comes into force, Airlangga said in June.

It is expected to benefit the country's top exports to the bloc including palm oil, footwear, textiles and fisheries, he added.

The EU is Indonesia's fifth-largest trading partner with bilateral trade reaching $30.1 billion last year.

The agreement would further open up EU access to the Indonesian market of around 280 million people, Deni said.

- Green policy tensions -

Ties had been frayed by issues including a proposed import ban by Brussels on products linked to deforestation that has angered Indonesia, a major palm oil exporter.

Under the EU deforestation regulation, exports of a vast range of goods -- including soy, timber, palm oil, cattle, printing paper and rubber -- are prohibited if produced on land deforested after December 2020.

Airlangga said Sefcovic had promised to give "special treatment" regarding the regulation for countries that have signed trade agreements with the bloc.

The EU has postponed the rule's implementation to the end of this year after a backlash.

However, activists are concerned the trade agreement would lead to more deforestation driven by increased demand for Indonesian palm oil.

"The remaining natural forests in palm oil concessions will potentially be cleared in the near future (and) converted into plantations," said Syahrul Fitra of Greenpeace Indonesia.

Brussels reportedly pushed to include provisions about deforestation in the agreement, but details have not been made public.

After Tuesday's signing, the two sides are expected to carry out steps including legal checks and translation of the official documents, Airlangga said.

The deal will then have to be ratified by EU members as well as lawmakers in the European Parliament and Indonesia.

The agreement is expected to be implemented by 2027, Airlangga added.

 

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