Jakarta (ANTARA) – Indonesia will receive an additional US$400 million in funding for its Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), raising the total commitment from US$21.4 billion to US$21.8 billion, Economic Coordinating Minister Airlangga Hartarto said.Airlangga told reporters in Jakarta on Thursday that Germany’s development bank KfW recently signed investment commitments for two energy transition projects.“Germany, through KfW financing, has committed to two projects, including the Saguling Floating Solar Power Plant,” Airlangga said.He added that more than 20 projects are currently in the pipeline for JETP funding consideration.“We have many projects on the list, more than 20 in the pipeline,” Airlangga said.So far, Indonesia has secured US$21.4 billion in JETP funding, of which around US$3.1 billion has already been utilized.Several priority projects are listed under JETP, both ready for financing and awaiting approval.Upcoming projects include the Saguling Floating Solar Plant, the Muara Laboh geothermal plant, waste-to-energy in Legok Nangka, Sulawesi transmission network, South Sumatra wind power, and a de-dieselization program.Of the total US$21.4 billion funding, US$11 billion comes from the International Partners Group (IPG) and US$10 billion from the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ).To accelerate clean energy development, the government has established the Energy Transition and Green Economy Task Force (Satgas TEH) to speed up JETP implementation, including planning for JETP 2.0.The task force aims to optimize funding utilization in support of Indonesia’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) targets and expand the country’s clean energy capacity.