Jakarta is celebrating the WTO ruling, but analysts warn demand and market access issues could stall hopes of progress for it – and Malaysia.
Indonesia, one of the world’s largest emitters of greenhouse gases, has cast doubt on the usefulness of the Paris agreement after President Donald Trump announced the US would withdraw from the global climate accord.
EU says that Indonesia is a sovereign state and has the right to decide from which country it imports its oil, even if it comes from Russia.
In 2019, the world’s largest palm oil producer Indonesia sued the EU at the World Trade Organization (WTO) over the group’s Renewable Energy Directive II (RED II) policy. Under the RED II, the EU plans to phase out the use of palm oil-based biofuel by 2030 if they indicate a high risk of causing “indirect land use change” (ILUC).
Indonesia has welcomed a recent ruling by the World Trade Organisation (WTO), which found that the European Union (EU) discriminated against Indonesian palm oil-based biofuel, giving it unfair and detrimental treatment,
The World Trade Organization (WTO) dispute panel has ruled that the European Union (EU) violated provisions of the Technical
The WTO decision opens up new opportunities for the development of palm oil-based biodiesel, previously discriminated against by the EU.
Trump’s return to power puts both ASEAN and the EU in a similar quagmire. Under imminent geopolitical tectonic changes, both institutions must renovate and find a new sense of purpose.
The European Commission says 41 cross-border energy projects will receive €1.25 billion ($1.3 billion) in funding, with one-fifth allocated to hydrogen, while Lhyfe has started building its fifth hydrogen production site in northern France,
Indonesia has become the latest south-east Asian country to test the global carbon market kicked off by a recent UN agreement by selling carbon credits linked to energy projects.
Last November, at the G20 conference in Rio de Janeiro, Indonesia’s new president, Prabowo Subianto, vowed to bring forward by a decade the date at which Southeast Asia’s biggest economy would remove as much carbon from the atmosphere as it emits.
Prabowo Subianto has long dreamed of being Indonesia's president. Here's how he spent his first 100 days in the job.