Low Tuck Kwong: the Indonesian mining billionaire who is benefitting from coal boom

A decade ago, the Indonesian mining billionaire Low Tuck Kwong was known mainly for his private zoo – a fabulous menagerie of peacocks, orangutans and Sumatran tigers, featuring zebra-hybrids known as “zonkeys” and the tycoon’s own “zorse”. To visiting journalists, he came across as a sort of Doctor Dolittle. In 2013, Forbes Asia reported the following exchange with a white cockatoo. “Assalamu alaikum,” said Low to the bird, which gave “a boisterous reply”. He then moved on to the turtle doves…

That year, Low’s business outlook seemed clouded, says The Wall Street Journal (WSJ). Since buying his first coal mine in Borneo in 1997, he’d made a tidy fortune. Yet the days of King Coal looked numbered. Some experts concluded that 2013 would mark the peak for the dirtiest fossil fuel as advanced economies shuttered coal-fired power stations. What they didn’t predict was how forcefully a swathe of Asian emerging economies would pick up the slack. Coal is booming again, with consumption surpassing the eight-billion-ton level for three years in a row. And Indonesia, the world’s largest coal exporter, is “shipping more of it than any nation in history”.

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