The Phnom Penh Post

Indonesia earmarks $660M for flood mitigation projects

- Arya Dipa

INDONESIA’S Public Works and Housing Ministry has poured nine trillion rupiah ($660 million) into several projects to protect West Java from flooding.

The budget has been used to finance nine flood mitigation projects, ranging from dams and retention basins to undergroun­d water tunnels and river normalisat­ion in Bandung and Karawang, as well as two of Jakarta’s satellite cities – Bogor and Bekasi.

West Java governor Ridwan Kamil says his administra­tion is currently completing the Ciawi Dam and the Sukamahi Dam in Bogor.

The constructi­on of the Ciawi Dam began in 2016 and is now 44.8 per cent built. Ridwan expected that the 3.9 trillion rupiah dam would be completed this year.

The Sukamahi Dam, meanwhile, is 34.4 per cent built, with 90.3 per cent of the project’s land acquisitio­n complete.

Ridwan said the two dams would be able to hold 30 per cent of the water that flows to Jakarta.

“With the budget allocation we will focus on the upstream, to hold the water. Next year we will move to the downstream,” he told the media on Tuesday in Bandung.

The government is also completing the constructi­on of two dams in the Cikeas and Cileungsi rivers in Bekasi – one of the worst-hit areas during the recent massive floods in Greater Jakarta.

In Karawang, the government will build a dam in the Cibeet River. “We already secured the project’s budget, totalling 800 billion rupiah,” Ridwan added.

In Greater Bandung, the government has completed the Curug tunnel and the Cieunteung retention basin and will construct another retention basin in Andir. The facilities are expected to control water flow in the southern part of Bandung, which is often flooded by the Citarum River overflowin­g after heavy rainfall.

The Curug tunnel will speed up the flow of the Citarum River, while the retention basins will hold the overflowin­g water.

Ridwan said they had just started the tender process for a retention basin in Andir, which just like the one in Cieunteung will have a total area of around 8ha.

In the eastern part of Bandung, Ridwan said the central and provincial government­s had been working to widen sewers and normalise three rivers in the area.

“Usually they get flooded in the rainy season but not this year,” he said.

Public Works and Housing Minister Basuki Hadimuljon­o said people could already see the benefit of the newly constructe­d Cisangkuy floodway.

“Usually, when there is highintens­ity rain, around 300 millimetre­s per day, people have to use boats, but on December 17, it hit 424 millimetre­s per day and people still rode their motorcycle­s, the roads were still dry,” Basuki said.

The tunnel, Basuki said, was effective at siphoning water that usually inundated Bandung after heavy rain.

Basuki said he had learned that the water level could decrease up to several tens of centimetre­s in five hours.

“It’s still not perfect because once the water receded there was still a puddle in the basin. I will handle these problems this year,” he said.

 ?? WAHYU PUTRO A/ANTARA ?? Indonesian President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo inspects the constructi­on of the Ciawi Dam in Bogor, West Java, on Wednesday. Once completed, the dam, along with the nearby Sukamahi Dam that is also being developed, is expected to help minimise flooding in Jakarta.
WAHYU PUTRO A/ANTARA Indonesian President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo inspects the constructi­on of the Ciawi Dam in Bogor, West Java, on Wednesday. Once completed, the dam, along with the nearby Sukamahi Dam that is also being developed, is expected to help minimise flooding in Jakarta.

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