From Greenfield to Full Operations: Compliance Architecture and Co-Sourced Internal Audit for a Leading American Chemical Company in West Java, Indonesia
JCSS Indonesia guided a leading American chemical manufacturer through every stage of its Indonesian greenfield investment — from initial corporate structuring and industrial licensing to factory construction compliance and co-sourced internal audit — establishing the full regulatory and governance architecture for its West Java production facility from day one.
The Challenge
Greenfield industrial investment in Indonesia by a foreign company is one of the most complex regulatory navigation exercises in Southeast Asian business. The American chemical manufacturer faced not only the standard PT PMA incorporation requirements but also a layered industrial licensing regime — environmental impact assessments (AMDAL), Ministry of Industry manufacturing licenses, hazardous materials (B3) handling permits, and OSS-RBA risk-based licensing.
| Challenge | Operational Reality | Business Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-agency licensing complexity | Industrial chemical manufacturing requires permits from: BKPM, Ministry of Industry, Ministry of Environment (AMDAL), BNPB, and local West Java government | Incorrect licensing sequence delays factory construction commencement; each delay costs significant capital |
| KBLI selection for chemical manufacturing | Specialty chemical KBLI codes carry different foreign ownership caps and investment requirements | Incorrect KBLI selection requires costly OSS amendment; may require capital restructuring |
| Environmental and safety compliance | AMDAL process, B3 chemical storage permits, and fire safety certifications are pre-condition for factory operation | Operating without valid AMDAL subjects management to criminal liability under UU Lingkungan Hidup |
| Post-construction compliance transition | Compliance requirements shift dramatically from pre-construction (licensing) to operational phase (tax, BPJS, customs, environmental reporting) | Gap in compliance handover between project team and operational management is the highest-risk period |
| Internal audit requirement | Parent group audit committee required Indonesian subsidiary to have co-sourced internal audit coverage from first operational year | No in-house internal audit capacity at newly operational subsidiary |
Our Approach
- 1
Corporate Structuring Advisory
Designed the optimal PT PMA structure: KBLI code selection for specialty chemical manufacturing, capital structure aligned to DER requirements under PP 55/2022, foreign ownership analysis under the Positive Investment List, and registered address strategy for West Java industrial zone.
- 2
End-to-End Licensing Navigation
Managed the complete licensing sequence through OSS-RBA: NIB issuance, Ministry of Industry manufacturing license (IUI), AMDAL environmental impact approval coordination, B3 hazardous materials storage permits, and local West Java government construction and operational permits.
- 3
Construction Phase Compliance
Provided compliance support throughout factory construction: contractor withholding tax (PPh 23 on construction services), import duty analysis for machinery and equipment, BPJS enrollment for construction workforce, and RPTKA for expatriate construction specialists.
- 4
Operational Phase Transition
Designed and implemented the full operational compliance calendar: monthly PPh 21/23/25/PPN filings, Coretax PIC setup, LKPM quarterly reporting, environmental compliance reporting, and customs/import duty management for chemical raw materials.
- 5
Co-Sourced Internal Audit Programme
Appointed as co-sourced internal audit agent from first operational year: designed risk-based audit universe, conducted quarterly audits covering financial reporting controls, procurement, inventory management, environmental compliance, and ITGC; reported to local Audit Committee and parent group CAE.
Outcomes
| Result | Metric | Strategic Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Greenfield to operations | Zero licensing delays | Significant capital expenditure protected from delay-related cost overruns |
| Licensing completion | All permits obtained in sequence | Full legal operational status from day one of factory operations |
| Compliance architecture | Complete from day one | No retroactive compliance remediation required — clean start |
| Internal audit coverage | Co-sourced from year one | Parent group audit committee requirement satisfied; local governance standards maintained |
| Single-point partnership | All Indonesian compliance managed | Client has no requirement for any other Indonesian advisor |
Frameworks Applied
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