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JAKARTA, Sept 7 (Reuters) – Indonesia will likely lose in  its trade dispute against the European Union (EU) over the  Southeast Asian country's 2020 ban on exports of nickel ore,  President Joko Widodo said on Wednesday. 
But regardless of the World Trade Organisation's (WTO)  decision in the dispute, Indonesia will move ahead with plans to  impose similar bans on exports of other raw commodities, the  president told an economists' forum in Jakarta. 
Indonesia was the world's biggest exporter of nickel before  it banned ore exports two years ago in favour of attracting  foreign investors to develop nickel smelters and downstream  industries onshore, with China being a significant source of  investment. 
As the 2020 ban loomed, the EU filed a WTO complaint, saying  the restrictions unfairly limited its stainless steel producers'  access to nickel in particular, and other commodities.
"It looks like we will lose at the WTO, but it's fine, the  industry is already built," said Jokowi, as the president is  known. 
The ban has boosted Indonesia's export revenues, Jokowi  said, noting its nickel ore shipments were worth around $1  billion seven years ago, compared with $20.9 billion worth of  exports of nickel-based products in 2021. 
The WTO formed a panel overseeing the EU and Indonesia's  dispute in April, 2021 and is expected to issue its final report  in the last quarter of 2022, according to the Geneva-based  body's website.
The panel typically judges whether a complainant's claims  are well-founded and if so, recommends changes.      
The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, said  preserving the international rules-based trading system is  critical at this current situation.
"The measures introduced by Indonesia illegally restrict  access to raw materials needed for stainless steel production,  thus amounting to an export restriction, contrary to WTO rules,"  it said in an email to Reuters late Thursday. 
Jokowi reiterated Indonesia will stop exporting raw copper,  bauxite and tin to encourage foreign investment and help the  country jump up the value chain in resource processing. He did  not provide a time frame for the adoption of such a policy.     
 "If we're consistent (with export policy), I'm sure that in  2030 our gross domestic product will reach above $3 trillion,"  he said. 
Indonesia's GDP was $1.19 trillion in 2021.     
(Reporting by Gayatri Suroyo and Stefanno Sulaiman; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor)
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