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As Jakarta sinks, Indonesia picks Borneo for new capital

As Jakarta sinks, Indonesia picks Borneo for new capital

INDONESIA: Indonesia will move its capital to the eastern edge of jungle-clad Borneo island, President Joko Widodo said yesterday (Aug 26), as the country shifts its political heart away from congested and sinking megalopolis Jakarta.

economicsenvironmentconstructionnatural-resourcespolitics
By AFP

Tuesday 27 August 2019 10:19 AM


 

The proposed location – near the regional cities of Balikpapan and Samarinda – is an area at “minimal” risk of natural disasters, where the government already owns some 180,000 hectares (445,000 acres) of land, he added.

“The location is very strategic – it’s in the centre of Indonesia and close to urban areas,” Widodo said in a televised speech.

“The burden Jakarta is holding right now is too heavy as the centre of governance, business, finance, trade and services,” he added.

The announcement ends months of speculation about whether Widodo would follow through on the long-mooted plan – it was floated by the newly independent country’s founding father Sukarno more than half a century ago.

Shifting from problem-plagued Jakarta would also transfer Indonesia’s power base off Java island, where about half of the sprawling archipelago’s 260 million people live.

“Moving the capital off Java is a gesture that aims to solidify unity,” said Jakarta-based political risk analyst Kevin O'Rourke.

“Jakarta will continue to be a megacity – as a centre for finance and commerce – for a few more decades, but ultimately it is at severe risk to climate change,” he added.

A bill for the proposed move will now be presented to parliament, Widodo said.

Building is set to begin next year with the move of some 1.5 million civil servants slated to begin by 2024, at a cost of 466 trillion rupiah ($33 billion), officials said.

Orangutans, mining

Known as Kalimantan, Indonesia’s section of Borneo – the island it shares with Malaysia and Brunei – is home to major mining activities as well as rainforests, and is one of the few places on Earth with orangutans in their natural habitat.

Environmentalists expressed concerns the capital city move could threaten endangered species.

“The government must make sure that the new capital is not built in a conservation or protected area,” said Greenpeace Indonesia campaigner Jasmine Putri.

The region has also been blanketed in choking haze from annual forest fires that ravage vast swathes of land.

“That makes Kalimantan unfit as a candidate for a new capital city,” said Jakarta-based urban planning expert Nirwono Joga.

“And the move won’t necessarily free Jakarta of problems like flooding, traffic jams and rapid urbanisation,” he added.

Concerns have soared over the future of Jakarta – a city nicknamed “the Big Durian” after the pungent, spiky fruit that deeply divides fans and detractors.

Built on swampland, the city is one of the fastest-sinking cities on earth, with experts warning that one third of it could be submerged by 2050 if current rates continue. The problem is largely linked to excessive groundwater extraction.

But the city of 10 million – a number that bloats to about 30 million with surrounding satellite cities – is also plagued by a host of other ills, from eye-watering traffic jams and pollution to the risk of earthquakes and floods.

Indonesia is not the first Southeast Asian country to move its capital.

Myanmar and Malaysia have both moved their seat of government, while Brazil, Pakistan and Nigeria are among the nations that have also shifted their capital cities.

Time running out

One of the fastest-sinking cities on earth, environmental experts warn that one third of it could be submerged by 2050 if current rates continue.

Decades of uncontrolled and excessive depletion of groundwater reserves, rising sea-levels, and increasingly volatile weather patterns mean swathes of it have already started to disappear.

Existing environmental measures have had little impact, so authorities are taking drastic action: the nation will have a new capital.

Its location could be announced imminently, according to local reports.

Relocating the country’s administrative and political heart may be an act of national preservation, but it effectively sounds the death-knell for Jakarta where many of the city’s 10 million residents have little means of escape.

“When the floods came I used to tremble,” food stall owner Rasdi told AFP.

“I nearly drowned back in 2007 – all my belongings were swept away and I had to start over again,” said from his home close to Jakarta’s northern port, one of the worst affected by sinking ground.

Built in an earthquake zone, on swamplands, near the confluence of 13 rivers, the city’s foundations have been further stressed by unchecked development, heavy traffic and poor urban planning.

Millions vulnerable

Jakarta doesn’t have a piped water system in its northern reaches, so local industry and millions of residents tap into its aquifers.

This rampant groundwater extraction causes land subsidence, which is making Jakarta sink by as much as 25 centimetres (10 inches) a year in some areas – adouble the global average for major coastal cities.

Today some parts of it sit some four metres below sea level, irrevocably changing the landscape, and leaving millions vulnerable to natural disasters.

Flooding is common during the tropical nation's wet season and that is expected get worse as sea levels rise due to global warming.

The partly submerged skeleton of an abandoned mosque at the waterfront underscores the severity of the problem, while vast puddles scar the roads, and for some the ground floor of their homes is no longer habitable.

Murky green water flows along the floor of an abandoned building, while tiny shacks on stilts line the garbage-strewn waterfront.

“You can see it with your own eyes,” said Andri, a 42-year-old who liked many Indonesians goes by one name.

“When I was a kid I used to swim over there,” he added, motioning off in the distance.

“Over time the water just kept getting higher and higher.”

Even as Widodo presses on with the plan for a 21st century capital in Borneo island, local authorities are desperately probing solutions for Jakarta.

A scheme to construct artificial islands in Jakarta’s bay, which would act as a buffer against the Java Sea, as well as a vast coastal wall was approved.

But there is no guarantee the estimated $40 billion project – which has been beset by years of delays – would solve the city’s sinking woes.

Building barriers has been tried before. A concrete wall was built along the shore in Rasdi’s district and other high-risk neighbourhoods.

But they have cracked and show signs of sinking already. Water seeps through them, soaking the maze of narrow streets and shacks in the city’s poorest neighbourhoods.

Cities at risk

“Building walls is not a permanent solution,” said Heri Andreas, an earth scientist at the Bandung Institute of Technology.

“We need to go to the next step and fix our water management.”

The hub of Southeast Asia’s biggest economy has seen breakneck development over the years. New buildings and skyscrapers are compressing the ground, which aggravates its sinking problem.

But the biggest culprit is excessive groundwater extraction, and the city has no way to meet demand without it due to a lack of water-retention facilities or a comprehensive piping network, Andreas said.

Jakarta is not the only sinking urban centre.

Cities from Venice and Shanghai to New Orleans and Bangkok are also at risk, but Jakarta has done little to tackle the problem head on, according to Andreas.

“They’ve taken steps to mitigate it,” he said of other sinking cities.

“It’s expensive. But if we look at the future consequences, it’ll be worth it.

“The thing we always have problems with is where to start,” he added.

Many who earn their livelihood in Jakarta's most dangerous neighbourhoods don’t have the luxury of time to wait for a solution – or the means to escape.

“Of course I’m worried, but there’s nothing I can do,” said Rastini, who scrapes by de-shelling clams caught by local fishermen.

The 40-year-old added: “I’ve been here since I was a kid and I'll stay here.”