Since the adoption of the Accession Roadmap for Indonesia in February 2024, Indonesia has continued to demonstrate strong commitment,Jakarta (ANTARA) – Indonesia aims to complete the technical review phase of its accession to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) within the next three to four years, Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto said on Friday.The target comes as Southeast Asia’s largest economy advances through the early stages of its bid to join the Paris-based organization, which includes many of the world's advanced economies.Speaking after a meeting with OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann on the sidelines of the OECD Ministerial Council Meeting (MCM) in Paris, Airlangga said Indonesia had maintained strong momentum since the adoption of its accession roadmap in February 2024.”Since the adoption of the Accession Roadmap for Indonesia in February 2024, Indonesia has continued to demonstrate strong commitment,” Airlangga said in a statement released in Jakarta.”The Initial Memorandum, which aligns national regulations with 240 OECD legal instruments across 26 policy areas, was officially submitted a year ago. This reflects our reform priorities in the economic, social, and governance sectors,” he added.Indonesia has so far received 20 OECD questionnaires as part of the accession process and has undergone Fact-Finding Missions reviewing environmental policies and public governance frameworks.Airlangga highlighted positive results from Indonesia’s first accession review presentation before the OECD Environment Policy Committee in April 2026.The assessment found that about 60 percent of Indonesia’s environmental policies were already aligned with OECD legal instruments, according to the minister.He said Indonesia was prepared to adopt OECD recommendations, including expanding action plans covering energy, climate change, environmental information, and transboundary pollution.To support policy implementation, the government has stepped up engagement with non-government stakeholders, including the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin), which represents Business at OECD (BIAC), and the Confederation of Indonesian Trade Unions (KSBSI), representing the Trade Union Advisory Committee (TUAC).Airlangga also thanked seven partner countries — Australia, Ireland, the Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland — for providing technical and financial support for Indonesia’s accession efforts.Institutional capacity-building has also been strengthened through an internship program for staff from the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs at the OECD Secretariat. The program has entered its second phase and is expected to continue into a third round.The two sides also discussed the global economic impact of escalating international conflicts, particularly on oil prices and inflation.Airlangga called for a stronger role for the International Energy Agency (IEA), an OECD-affiliated body, in coordinating strategic oil supply policies to help ease volatility in global commodity markets.