Los Angeles Times

Indonesia relocating capital to less troubled city

- By Edna Tarigan and Niniek Karmini Tarigan and Karmini write for the Associated Press.

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Jakarta is congested, polluted, prone to earthquake­s and rapidly sinking into the Java Sea. Now the government is leaving and moving the country’s capital to the island of Borneo.

President Joko Widodo envisions the constructi­on of a new capital as a solution to the problems that have beset Jakarta, reducing its population while allowing the country to start fresh with a “sustainabl­e city” that has good public transporta­tion, is integrated with its natural environmen­t and is in an area that’s not prone to natural disasters.

“The constructi­on of the new capital city is not merely a physical move of government offices,” said the president, known by the nickname Jokowi, last week ahead of parliament’s approval of the plan. “The main goal is to build a smart new city, a new city that is competitiv­e at the global level, to build a new locomotive for the transforma­tion ... toward an Indonesia based on innovation and technology, based on a green economy.”

Skeptics worry, however, about the environmen­tal impact of plunking a sprawling 990-square-mile city down in Borneo’s East Kalimantan province, which is home to orangutans, leopards and a wide array of other wildlife, as well as committing $34 billion to the ambitious project amid a pandemic.

“The new capital city’s strategic environmen­tal study shows that there are at least three basic problems,” said Dwi Sawung, an official with the WALHI environmen­tal group.

“There are threats to water systems and risks of climate change, threats to f lora and fauna, and threats of pollution and environmen­tal damage,” she said.

First proposed in 2019, Jokowi’s plan to establish the city of Nusantara — an old Javanese term meaning “archipelag­o” — will entail erecting government buildings and housing from scratch. Initial estimates were that about 1.5 million civil servants would be relocated to the city, about 1,200 miles northeast of Jakarta, though ministries and government agencies are still working to finalize that number.

It will be located in the vicinity of Balikpapan, an East Kalimantan seaport with a population of about 700,000.

Indonesia is an archipelag­o nation of more than 17,000 islands, but 54% of its more than 270 million people live on Java, the country’s most densely populated island and where Jakarta is located.

Jakarta is home to about 10 million people and three times that number in the greater metropolit­an area.

It has been described as the world’s most rapidly sinking city, and at the current rate, it is estimated that one-third of the city could be submerged by 2050. The main cause is uncontroll­ed groundwate­r extraction, but it has been exacerbate­d by the Java Sea’s rise as a consequenc­e of climate change.

Beyond that, Jakarta’s air and groundwate­r are heavily polluted, it floods regularly and its streets are so clogged that congestion costs the economy an estimated $4.5 billion a year.

In constructi­ng a purpose-built capital, Indonesia will be treading a path that others have in the past, including Pakistan, Brazil and Myanmar.

The committee overseeing the constructi­on is led by Abu Dhabi’s crown prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyan — no stranger to ambitious building projects at home in the United Arab Emirates — and also includes Masayoshi Son, the billionair­e founder and chief executive of Japanese holding company SoftBank, and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who runs the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change.

State funds will pay for 19% of the project, with the rest coming from cooperatio­n between the government and business entities and from direct investment by state-run companies and the private sector.

Public Works and Housing Minister Basuki Hadimuljon­o said initial planning had been carried out by clearing 138,800 acres of land to build the presidenti­al palace, the national parliament and government offices, as well as roads linking the capital to other cities in East Kalimantan.

The idea is to have the core government area done by 2024, according to Basuki. Current plans call for about 8,000 civil servants to have moved to the city by then.

Jokowi previously said he expected the presidenti­al palace to be moved to the new capital before he ends his second term in 2024, along with the Home, Foreign and Defense ministries and the State Secretaria­t.

The entire relocation process is scheduled to be completed by 2045. What effect it will have on Jakarta and the people who stay behind is unclear, said Agus Pambagio, a public policy expert at the University of Indonesia, who urged that anthropolo­gists be brought in to study the issue.

“There will be very big social changes, both for people who work as civil servants, society in general and local residents,” he said.

 ?? Dita Alangkara Associated Press ?? THE INDONESIAN government is abandoning Jakarta, its crowded, polluted and sinking capital, seen in the background, for a city on the island of Borneo.
Dita Alangkara Associated Press THE INDONESIAN government is abandoning Jakarta, its crowded, polluted and sinking capital, seen in the background, for a city on the island of Borneo.

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