REPORT – Dirty Energy Players in the Clean Energy Transition: An Analysis of Influential Individuals in Renewable Energy Businesses

President Prabowo Subianto delivered an ambitious statement in his address to the United Nations General Assembly, emphasizing Indonesia’s commitment to fulfilling the 2015 Paris Agreement and achieving net-zero emissions no later than 2060. He further stated that, beginning next year, the majority of Indonesia’s additional power generation capacity will rely on renewable energy sources.

However, ongoing energy transition efforts that continue to focus primarily on energy mix targets remain problematic and fall far short of the ideals of a truly green transition. The Clean Transition Coalition—comprising several civil society organizations, including Satya Bumi, Trend Asia, Sawit Watch, SPKS, Greenpeace, and Walhi—has found that Indonesia’s energy transition approach does not lead to a transformation of the energy governance system, but rather amounts to a mere technological substitution. This non-transformative approach, combined with high project costs and the pursuit of energy mix targets, has resulted in an energy transition that tends to benefit incumbent players who remain actively engaged in dirty energy businesses.

Recurring flawed practices in the energy transition process are also driven by the proliferation of conflict-of-interest spaces and the involvement of networks of Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs). The Clean Transition Coalition identified at least 28 individuals who meet the criteria of PEPs under the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) and Indonesian Financial Services Authority Regulation No. 01/2017, operating behind six major energy business groups. Individuals within these PEP networks occupy highly strategic positions in the energy transition process, serving as stakeholders within the executive branch, the judiciary, and law enforcement agencies.

It is acknowledged that not all of these individuals are directly involved in formulating or making decisions that support energy businesses. In fact, most are positioned at the level of parent companies or strategic holding entities that oversee multiple business sectors, rather than being directly embedded in renewable energy operations. Nevertheless, the presence of PEPs across all corporations examined in this study demonstrates the inherent political risks embedded within Indonesia’s renewable energy industry.

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Annisa Rahmawati

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Annisa Rahmawati is a woman environmental activist. She started her career in 2008 as a Local Governance Advisor on a humanitarian program in Aceh - at EU-GTZ International Service which focused on peacekeeping and local government capacity building. Her experience in sustainable business comes from Fairtrade International as an assistant and at Greenpeace Southeast Asia as a Senior Forest Campaigner focusing on market campaigns for industrial commodities, especially deforestation-free palm oil from 2013-2020. In addition, Annisa also worked as a project assistant at UN-ESCAP Bangkok for sustainable urban development planning in 2012. Annisa has an educational background in Biology from Brawijaya University Malang and obtained a master's degree in International Management of Resources and Environment (IMRE) at TU Bergakademie Freiberg Germany with the support of the Heinrich Boell Stiftung Foundation. Annisa is enthusiastic and passionate about spreading messages and awareness to the world about environmental issues and how to find solutions to make businesses more responsible, as well as how we can act to deal with the climate crisis that we are currently facing.