According
to Partner and Vik Tang, International Counsel at HBT, Nadia Harto, Associate,
Jakarta, last year, the Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources
(ESDM) issued ESDM Decree No. 31/2013 on Expatriate Utilization and Development
of National Employees in Oil and Gas Business (Decree 31), which introduces
more stringent requirements and restrictions on the employment of expatriates
for certain roles in the oil and gas sector.
Decree
31 requires an responsibility on upstream and downstream companies in the
Indonesian oil and gas sector, and related supporting industries, to make a
priority on the employment of Indonesian workers, and particularly forbids
employment of expatriates for the following roles:
·
human
resources;
·
legal;
·
health,
safety and environment;
·
supply
chain management, including procurement and logistics;
·
quality
control, as well as inspection; and
·
exploration
and exploitation functions below superintendent level or equivalent positions.
Decree
31 allows the utilization of expatriates for oil and gas activities in
restricted circumstances, slike employment of expatriates:
·
as
director or commissioner for the purpose of encouraging investment in the oil
and gas sector;
·
for
professional positions requiring specific skills and technological expertise in
this sector in order to transfer knowledge relating to new technology; and
·
for
certain positions that cannot be filled by domestic workers.
The
application of expatriates for ‘non-prohibited functions’ in the oil and gas
industry ought to be permitted by the Directorate General of Oil and Gas.
Decree 31 endows with for a reasonably meticulous set of requirements that
should be met by the expatriates in question. -For example, they should have at
least of 5 years related working experience, be 30 – 55 years of age, be able
to communicate in the Indonesian language and enthusiastic to transfer
knowledge and skills to Indonesian workers. The Indonesian language requirement
for expatriates has attributed in some of regulations, even if to date it has
not been imposed firmly.
Although
Decree 31 is intended for encouraging the use of Indonesian workers in the oil
and gas sector, there had been no complaints, but there is a warning, it risks
further limit the availability of skilled senior international personnel that
the Indonesian oil and gas industry presently requires.
Businesses
operating in the Indonesian oil and gas sector should be aware of the
restrictions concerning hiring expatriates, as a result of nonconformity with
the said restrictions range from nuisance of administrative sanctions, probable
revocation of the pertinent expatriate’s work permit and non-recovery of operating
costs from the government. The degree to which the new requirements are
enforced in practice must be monitored by companies operating in the Indonesian
oil and gas sector.
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