Indonesia’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources has launched its 2025–2034 Electricity Supply Business Plan (RUPTL), aiming to add 69.5 GW of new power generation capacity—76 percent of which will come from renewable sources and storage systems. The initiative aligns with the country’s 2060 Net Zero Emission target and addresses growing urban energy demands.
In the first phase (2025–2030), 27.9 GW will be installed, including 12.2 GW from renewables, 9.2 GW from gas, and 3.5 GW from coal (mainly projects already underway), along with 3 GW in storage systems. The second phase (2030–2034) will focus even more on clean energy, adding 37.7 GW in renewables and storage, while limiting thermal additions to 3.9 GW. The mix includes 17.1 GW of solar, 11.7 GW of hydro, 7.2 GW of wind, 5.2 GW of geothermal, 0.9 GW of bioenergy, and two 250 MW nuclear reactors in Sumatra and Kalimantan.
The plan also includes modernising Indonesia’s power grid with 48,000 km of new circuits and 108,000 MVA in substations, and expanding rural electrification through the Village Electricity Program to reach 780,000 households in 5,758 villages. Estimated at US$182 billion, the project expects 73 percent of generation investment from private firms and IPPs, with the remainder led by PT PLN. The RUPTL represents a major national strategy integrating clean energy, infrastructure modernisation, and inclusive development.