The Sun (Malaysia)

Indonesia starts developing controvers­ial food estate project

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JAKARTA: Indonesia has started developing a food estate to grow rice, corn and other crops that should eventually span the archipelag­o and aims to curb reliance on food imports in the world’s fourth most populous country, President Joko Widodo said yesterday.

The project, which is spearhead by the president’s former rival turned minister Prabowo Subianto, is expected to cover an area of 770,000ha, or more than ten times the size of Singapore.

The estate will allocate 148,000ha to rice and 622,000ha of non-irrigated land for crops like maize, said the president, who is widely known as Jokowi.

The food estate will be first located in Central Kalimantan on Borneo island and in North Sumatra, and will be extended to West Papua, East Nusa Tenggara and South Sumatra, Jokowi said in a cabinet meeting.

Self-sufficienc­y in food, sometimes via ambitious projects, has long been a target for Indonesian politician­s, given the country is a top importer of wheat and rice.

In the case of rice, a high-profile attempt by former autocrat Suharto to restore Indonesia’s self-sufficienc­y in the 1990s under Central Kalimantan’s Mega Rice Project proved disastrous due to the illsuited peat land.

Green groups have also criticised the latest plan and warned of the risk that dried out peatland could trigger devastatin­g forest fires.

Defense minister Prabowo said after the announceme­nt the project was needed now due to food scarcity warnings by the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Prabowo said the project would initially grow 30,000ha of cassava and this would rise to 1.4 million by the end of 2025 with its flour used as an ingredient of staples like bread and noodles. – Reuters

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