IDN · NATIONAL GRID

Indonesia
power plants.

Indonesia has 178 power plants in our public-data catalog, totalling 48.8 GW of tracked generating capacity. Its grid leans on coal — 60.2% of tracked capacity (29.3 GW), with natural gas a distant second at 26.3%. The largest single plant we track is PLTU Paiton I Unit 7 & 8 (5,355 MW, online since 2017).

Open Indonesia in nrgmap → All countries
178 Tracked plants
48.8 GW Tracked capacity
Coal Leading fuel
5 Fuel types

Indonesia electricity mix

Tracked installed capacity by fuel, from our public-data catalog. Each fuel links to its global page.

Largest plants in Indonesia

Every tracked plant in Indonesia, on one live map OPEN IN NRGMAP →

Frequently asked questions

Where does Indonesia get its electricity?

Across the 178 plants in our catalog, Indonesia's tracked capacity is led by coal at 60.2% (29.3 GW), then natural gas at 26.3% and hydro at 9.4%. These are tracked installed-capacity shares from public datasets, not live generation.

What is the largest power plant in Indonesia?

The largest plant we track in Indonesia is PLTU Paiton I Unit 7 & 8, a coal facility with 5,355 MW of capacity (commissioned 2017). Open nrgmap to see it on the map with 177 other Indonesia plants.

How many power plants does Indonesia have?

Our catalog tracks 178 power plants in Indonesia, totalling 48.8 GW. This is a large, representative subset built from sources like WRI, EIA and OpenStreetMap — the true national total, including the smallest installations, is higher.

Can I see Indonesia's power grid on a map?

Yes — open nrgmap at app.nrgmap.com and search Indonesia to fly to it. Every tracked plant is a marker sized by capacity and coloured by fuel, with the national fuel mix in the side panel.