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Strengthening workers’ human rights in Indonesia’s critical minerals industry 

Key Conclusions from the closed-door tripartite roundtable – Jakarta, 16 December 2025 

A closed-door tripartite roundtable hosted by the Djokosoetono Research Center (Universitas Indonesia) and CNV Internationaal has delivered a strong call to reinforce the protection of workers’ human rights in Indonesia’s rapidly expanding critical minerals industry. Government authorities, companies, and trade unions agreed that urgent, coordinated action is necessary—particularly in high‑risk mining and smelting zones—where challenges around occupational safety (K3), wages, working conditions, and freedom of association remain acute. 

Most pressing risks: safety, decent work, and freedom of association 

 

Participants acknowledged the sector’s strategic importance for Indonesia’s economic and green transition, while recognizing the significant human rights risks that accompany rapid growth. The forum highlighted three priority risk areas requiring immediate action:

  • Occupational safety and health (K3) 
  • Working conditions and wages 
  • Freedom of association and collective bargaining 

These risks are especially severe in industrial zones where oversight capacity is limited and labor standards are inconsistently enforced. 

Participants to the roundtable reaffirmed the relevance of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) and (upcoming) HREDD legislation in reducing these systemic risks. 

Barriers undermining protection 

Participants identified systemic obstacles that hinder worker protection: 

  • Insufficient capacity for labour inspection  
  • Fragmented and overlapping regulatory frameworks 
  • Weak local enforcement 
  • Poor coordination between central and regional authorities 
  • Limited, inconsistent social dialogue mechanisms 

These gaps leave workers and affected communities struggling to access information, justice, and remedies.

Gender Analysis: Women face heightened barriers in the nickel industry 

 

CNV Internationaal presented a new gender analysis revealing severe gender‑specific impacts: 

  • Limited access to clean water, housing, healthcare, and childcare 
  • Persistent gaps in maternal and reproductive healthcare 
  • Frequent denial of lactation rooms and menstrual leave 
  • Extremely limited access to formal employment in the industry 
  • Recruitment shaped by age, appearance, and gendered assumptions, excluding women from technical and higher‑paid roles 

The study warns that Indonesia’s industrial and green transition risks deepening inequality unless gender equity is embedded at every stage. 

Next steps: Coordinated action and long-term collaboration 

 Participants agreed on several shared action items: 

  • Clarify and harmonize regulatory frameworks 
  • Strengthen regional labor inspection and monitoring 
  • Improve access to grievance and remediation pathways 
  • Intensify tripartite dialogue within industrial zones 

This roundtable marked a crucial first step in building a safe and trusted space for dialogue among key stakeholders in Indonesia’s critical minerals sector. The insights and commitments emerging from this meeting will inform ongoing research, policy engagement, and concrete initiatives to strengthen workers’ human rights across the industry. 

 

This activity is part of CNV Internationaal’s broader efforts within the BOOST HRDD project. Find out more. 

 

Contact CNV Internationaal to explore opportunities to collaborate 

Margot Offerijns, m.offerijns@cnv.nl

Yunika Kurniyatiningsih, y.kurniyatiningsih@cnv.nl

 


About the work of CNV Internationaal:

Also watch: 
Nickel a scarce metal essential to the energy transition but at what cost?  
 

Publication date 03 02 2026