Business World

From traffic jams to regular floods, can Indonesia’s ‘Big Durian’ be fixed?

-

KUALA LUMPUR — Aida Widyawati boards a commuter train each day to travel from her home in South Tangerang, west of Jakarta, to her job as an office manager in the centre of Indonesia’s capital. The 120-km. (75-mile) round trip takes three and a half hours on a good day.

Last month, the mother-of-two sprained both ankles falling down some stairs at home and was forced to take a taxi to work. Her total journey time rose to six hours. In the monsoon season, her commute time can easily double.

“It is very boring,” said Widyawati, who tries to catch up on sleep during her travels to work. “I just hope that the government will one day offer a better service.”

Widyawati is one of more than 5 million people struggling to get to work each day in Southeast Asia’s largest city.

Known as the “Big Durian” after the stinky fruit popular in the region, Greater Jakarta is home to about 25 million people and faces numerous challenges due to rapid urbanizati­on, climate change and the failure of infrastruc­ture and public transport to keep pace with its expansion.

In addition to its infamous congestion — which is often cited by traffic studies as the worst in the world, and costs the city an estimated $3 billion per year — Jakarta also suffers from water scarcity, poor sanitation, regular flooding, air pollution and a lack of affordable housing.

Last year the mega-city joined 100 Resilient Cities, a network backed by The Rockefelle­r Foundation to help cities deal with 21st century pressures.

The Resilient Jakarta Secretaria­t, set up this September, has since brought together government officials, researcher­s, businesses and citizens’ groups to map the city and pinpoint issues that will be outlined in a first report due to be published in two weeks.

Oswar Mungkasa, Jakarta’s chief resilience officer, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation his city has at least three major problems: transporta­tion, flooding and land subsidence.

STUCK IN A JAM

Vehicle emissions, made worse by Jakarta’s jams, account for 70% of air pollution in the city. Besides the economic costs and negative effects on quality of life, the pollution puts extra pressure on public health services.

But in a city where pedestrian­s and motorcycli­sts often face off over the use of ramshackle pavements, some steps are being taken to help ease congestion.

Constructi­on of the $3-billion Jakarta Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) railway began in 2013, and it is likely to be up and running by 2019, when a light rail transit is also due to open.

“We are trying to solve the problem,” Mr. Mungkasa said. “In two or three years after the MRT (is built), the situation will be much, much better.”

Jakarta has also implemente­d an oddeven license plate policy for key roads to limit private car use in busy hours, while many residents have embraced motorcycle taxi apps in an effort to beat jams.

Critics note, however, that the MRT project will only connect South Jakarta to the city centre, and will therefore not be a silver bullet to cure chronic traffic problems.

There are also questions over whether the new train networks will be integrated with existing public transport, like the TransJakar­ta bus rapid transit system.

The city must develop a “push-pull strategy” to discourage private vehicles while incentiviz­ing public transport use, said Shobhakar Dhakal, head of the energy, environmen­t and climate change department at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT).

“But without giving proper options it doesn’t work,” he said, adding Jakarta should have built a metro train system two decades ago.

THAT SINKING FEELING

A coastal city built on a swampy plain, roughly 40% of Jakarta is below sea level. Making matters worse, most residents and businesses rely on wells that drain undergroun­d aquifers for their water supplies, resulting in the city sinking by 5-10 cm. each year.

Rising sea levels and the inability of crumbling infrastruc­ture to cope with excess water during heavy storms and the monsoon season result in regular flooding.

Resilient Jakarta’s report will ask how health and well-being can be improved through better water and waste management.

The city is working hard to solve these problems, said Mr. Mungkasa, with improvemen­ts to water infrastruc­ture, including the piped supply, and new waste water treatment facilities set to be built over the next 20 years. —

 ??  ?? A MAN carries drinks as he walks during lunch time at Sudirman Central Business District in Jakarta, Indonesia on Nov. 24.
A MAN carries drinks as he walks during lunch time at Sudirman Central Business District in Jakarta, Indonesia on Nov. 24.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines