Source: CleanTechnica
For decades, Indonesia built its economic and social stability around subsidized fuel. Cheap gasoline and diesel became embedded in transport habits, logistics systems and household budgets. Even today, fuel prices remain artificially low by regional standards. However, this affordability is sustained by heavy state intervention, not market reality. As global ... [continued] The post Indonesia’s EV Transition Not Just to Cut Emissions, More So to Cut Oil Dependence, Study Says appeared first on CleanTechnica.