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| RKAB |
Nickel Industries RKAB quota approval gives the Australian producer a stronger feedstock position in Indonesia’s tightening nickel market. The company has secured a 2026 nickel ore quota of 14.3mn wet metric tonnes, supporting both its rotary kiln electric furnace operations and its expanding battery-grade nickel platform.
The approved quota represents a 36pc increase from the company’s 10.5mn wmt quota in 2025. Of the total, up to 6mn wmt of saprolite ore will supply Nickel Industries’ RKEF operations, while 8.3mn wmt of limonite ore will support feed requirements for the Excelsior Nickel Cobalt HPAL project.
Nickel Industries RKAB quota approval follows the company’s receipt of an environmental permit from Indonesia’s environment ministry. The AMDAL permit is valid for five years and could support a further quota increase to around 19mn wmt in 2026, giving the company room to apply for additional feedstock later this year.
ENC HPAL Project Raises Nickel Industries’ Battery Materials Exposure
The ENC HPAL project is central to Nickel Industries’ shift beyond ferronickel and nickel pig iron-linked operations. The project is expected to be commissioned in the first quarter and is designed to produce 72,000 t/yr of nickel in mixed hydroxide precipitate, nickel sulphate, and nickel cathode.
This matters because limonite ore availability is becoming increasingly strategic in Indonesia. HPAL plants require consistent limonite feed to produce MHP and downstream nickel chemicals for batteries. Any restriction in ore quotas can directly affect project ramp-up schedules, operating rates, and customer supply planning.
Nickel Industries RKAB quota approval therefore gives the company an advantage over producers facing sharper quota cuts. It also supports the company’s ability to position ENC as part of Indonesia’s growing battery materials supply chain, where nickel intermediate production remains a major source of global supply growth.
Indonesia’s Quota Tightening Keeps Ore Supply Risk High
Indonesia’s wider nickel market remains under pressure despite Nickel Industries’ higher quota. The government plans to cut the 2026 RKAB nickel production quota to 260mn-270mn t from about 379mn t in 2025. That reduction signals a more controlled policy environment and tighter ore availability across the sector.
The impact is already visible. Weda Bay Nickel reportedly saw its RKAB cut by 70pc to 12mn wmt this year, showing that quota approvals are becoming more selective. Producers with stronger environmental approvals and clearer downstream integration may be better positioned, while others face greater uncertainty.
Nickel Industries also experienced the operational risk of delayed approvals. Its nickel ore production fell 77pc year on year to 1.67mn wmt in October-December 2025 because of downtime linked to RKAB delays. The company has since resumed operations at Hengjaya and expects mine sales to recover, but the episode shows how regulatory timing can quickly affect Indonesian nickel output.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Indonesia’s nickel market is entering a more disciplined phase where permits, ESG compliance, and quota access matter as much as installed capacity. Nickel Industries’ approval is positive, but the wider RKAB tightening means ore security will remain one of the biggest risks for nickel and battery materials supply.

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