Company type | Public |
---|---|
IDX: ADRO | |
ISIN | ID1000111305 |
Industry | Coal, Power Plant, Water, Logistics |
Founded | 1982 |
Headquarters | Tabalong, South Kalimantan, Indonesia |
Key people | Garibaldi Thohir (CEO) |
Revenue | USD 3.457 billion (2019) |
USD 618 million (2019) | |
USD 435 million (2019) | |
Total assets | USD 7.217 billion (2019) |
Total equity | USD 3.983 billion (2019) |
Number of employees | 23,000 (2019) |
Subsidiaries | Adaro Indonesia Adaro Power Saptaindra Sejati Rehabilitasi Lingkungan Indonesia Adaro Logistics Maritim Barito Perkasa Makmur Sejahtera Wisesa Arindo Holdings Adaro Persada Mandiri IndoMet Coal Alam Tri Abadi Adaro Mining Technologies Padang Sejahtera Agri Multi Lestari Tanjung Power Indonesia Sarana Rekreasi Mandiri Rachindo Investments Dianlia Setyamukti Balangan Anugerah Semesta Puradika Bongkar Muat Makmur Harapan Bahtera Internusa |
Website | www |
PT Adaro Energy Indonesia Tbk is an Indonesian coal mining company, the country's second-largest by production volume and largest by market capitalisation. In the 2023 Forbes Global 2000, Adaro Energy was ranked as the 1393th-largest public company in the world.[1] The company is an Indonesian energy group that focuses on coal mining through subsidiaries.[2] The principal location is at Tabalong district in South Kalimantan, where the subsidiary PT Adaro Indonesia operates the largest single-site coal mine in the southern hemisphere (roughly 110,000 tons of coal per day).[3] Adaro Energy operates under a first-generation CCA (coal co-operation agreement) with the Indonesian Government valid until 2022.
In 2016, Adaro was clearing land in Central Java for a 2,000MW coal plant, after a delay for more than four years due to land acquisition issues.[4] The construction of Indonesia's largest coal plant, into which Adaro invested $4.2 billion, began in June 2016.[5]
Adaro's strategy focuses on power generation as one of its "three pillars", besides coal exports and logistics.[3]
Indonesian coal giant Adaro Energy is challenging the handful of companies that dominate the country's power generation with an ambitious plan to build 5,000 megawatts of capacity by 2019, searching for a new growth driver amid sluggish coal demand.
The project is part of the ambitious plan by Indonesian President Joko Widodo's government to construct 35,000MW of generating capacity by 2019. Current capacity meets only 90% of demand throughout the Indonesian archipelago.