The $1.3 Trillion Coalition: Inside Prabowo and Macron’s Aggressive Blueprint to Triple France-Indonesia Trade
Key Takeaways
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PARIS, Investortrust.id — On a Thursday afternoon in the heart of Europe, Indonesia and France quietly engineered a sweeping rewiring of their bilateral economic corridor, transforming decades of polite diplomacy into a high-powered corporate engine.
Convening at the historic Hotel de Marigny within the Palais de l’Elysée complex on May 28, 2026, the two nations inaugurated the France-Indonesia High-Level Business Council (FI-HLBC). Witnessed directly by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto and French President Emmanuel Macron, the launch signals a calculated shift away from erratic transactional deals toward a permanent, institutionalized pipeline for cross-border capital.
For global macro funds and sovereign investors, this council marks a highly strategic institutional framework. By assembling roughly 30 boardroom titans representing a staggering combined market capitalization of $1.3 trillion, Jakarta and Paris are erecting a private-sector firewall to insulate their commercial interests from absolute geopolitical volatility. Led by the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) and France’s MEDEF International, the initiative aims to triple total bilateral trade by 2035, carving out an elite Asia-Europe supply chain for critical minerals, advanced defense systems, and clean energy technology.
A $3.5 Billion Opening Salvo
The afternoon business forum did not simply deliver rhetorical promises. In a direct manifestation of President Prabowo's state visit, corporate leaders formalized four immediate commercial agreements valued at a combined $3.5 billion. This fresh capital deployment focuses tightly on national energy grid security, localized trade infrastructure, and enhanced military defense engineering.
The corporate vehicle is co-chaired by two massive industrial heavyweights: Antoine de Saint-Affrique, CEO of French consumer giant Danone, and Anindya N. Bakrie, the Chairman of Kadin Indonesia and CEO of industrial conglomerate Bakrie & Brothers.
Following introductory economic frameworks presented by French Ecological Transition Minister Monique Barbut and Indonesian Investment and Downstreaming Minister Rosan Roeslani, the forum split into highly technical industrial war rooms.
War Rooms: From Nickel to Naval Power
The operational core of the forum was partitioned into four strategic clusters designed to align French engineering with Indonesia’s resource nationalism.
First, mining & energy infrastructure. Industrial leaders including Christel Bories of French mining multinational Eramet, Tony Wenas of copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia, Simon Aloysius Mantiri of state oil monopoly Pertamina, and Damien Havard of hydrogen innovator HDF Energy mapped out joint pipelines for strategic mineral processing and clean grid balancing.
In the sovereign defense and tech, the defense chiefs negotiated weapon systems localization. Key participants included Joga Dharma Setiawan from state defense holding DefendID, Sigit Santosa from state weapons manufacturer PT Pindad, Pierre-Eric Pommellet of Naval Group, and executives from European aerospace giant Airbus.
Thirdly, human capital & food security titans, led by James Riady of Lippo Group and Arif Rachmat of Triputra Agro Persada Group, engineered blueprints for healthcare tech and food supply chain resilience alongside Danone.
Lastly, industrialists including Florent Menegaux of tire giant Michelin and Omar Rahmadani of consumer giant Djarum Group mapped out advanced manufacturing footprints alongside Bakrie’s electric vehicle division, VKTR.
The Multipolar Defense Play
As the business forum concluded, both heads of state entered the hall to formally receive the memorandum of understanding executed between Kadin and MEDEF International.
Addressing the assembly of corporate captains on Thursday evening, President Prabowo explicitly framed the economic alliance as a vital stabilizer in a fractured global environment, praising President Macron's strategic independence on the world stage.
"Looking at the future development of the world, we are confident that amid global uncertainty, rising tensions, and conflicts, our two nations can play a highly positive role," Prabowo stated during his joint address. "Indonesia always views France and Europe as crucial global powers. We want to see the role of France and Europe grow stronger and more robust, so that we can cooperate effectively within a multipolar world order."
The corporate framework is designed to clear systemic bottlenecks that historically delayed projects under a previous $11 billion investment package signed during Macron's 2025 visit to Jakarta. By establishing a permanent executive channel, both governments hope to systematically dismantle bureaucratic friction, ensuring that the targeted trade tripling is fully realized by the next decade.

