Kuwait Times

More than 100 million hit by Indonesian power blackout

Jakarta transit system evacuated, some traffic lights out

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s state power company PLN estimated yesterday it would take several hours to restore power to Jakarta after a major blackout, blaming technical issues for cutting power to tens of millions of people in the capital and surroundin­g provinces. The power outage spread across areas that are home to more than 100 million people and appeared to have affected most areas of the capital, prompting the use of generators in some offices, malls and apartments.

“Hopefully for the Jakarta system, if everything goes to plan and the generating system is reliable, smooth supply should return in approximat­ely three hours,” Sripeni Intan Cahyani, acting chief executive of PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN), told a news conference. Cahyani said electricit­y customers in the provinces of West Java and Banten should get power back within four to five hours.

She blamed faulty transmissi­on circuits on Ungaran to Pemalang power line in Central Java for causing voltage drops that hit power networks in Jakarta as well as West Java and Banten provinces. “We will investigat­e to find the root causes and analyse them in detail. We will appoint an independen­t party to investigat­e,” said Cahyani, who only took up her post on Friday. Another PLN official said two out of three circuits had gone down triggering “cascading voltage” that caused outages as the west system collapsed.

Earlier yesterday, the mass rapid transit (MRT) system in Jakarta had to evacuate passengers from trains after the power outage that began just before noon local time. The city of Jakarta is the centre for government and business in Indonesia and is home to more than 10 million people, with around three times that many people living in the surroundin­g towns. The capital does suffer periodic blackouts, but usually short-lived and confined to certain areas.

Airport, hospitals operating Operations at Jakarta’s internatio­nal airport remained normal using back-up generators, its operator said via Twitter. Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan also said via Twitter that public hospitals were operating as usual, relying on generators. But at train stations, hundreds of passengers were left stranded after commuter lines stopped working. “The train stopped all of sudden, we had to wait for a long time,” said Ella Wasila, a passenger near Sudirman station in downtown Jakarta. “There were so many babies in the coach, they were crying, and people were shouting ‘open the door’.” The power outage also disrupted some cellular phone networks and provider Telkomsel said it was compiling an inventory of the number of devices affected by the power cut. The blackout also caused traffic lights to go out in some areas of the capital, creating traffic jams. Wiwik Widayanti, chief executive of the Jakarta regional train service, said more than 800,000 people used the network per day at a weekend, so buses would be used to transport stranded passengers. Indonesian Consumers Foundation (YLKI) said the blackout could discourage investment in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy and urged the government to increase PLN’s capacity.

“Power outages, especially in the Greater Jakarta area, are not only detrimenta­l for residentia­l consumers but also to the business sector,” Tulus Abadi, an executive at the foundation, said in a statement. Ordinary Indonesian­s also took to Twitter to express their frustratio­n. A Twitter user with the handle @henrydjuna­edi said in a post: “I’m a cashless guy, this is nightmare ... So far I can only find one working ATM in a 10 km radius. Restaurant­s and markets are closing or not accepting card payments.” —Reuters

 ??  ?? JAKARTA: People cross a road despite the traffic lights not working due to an electricit­y outage in Jakarta yesterday. Tens of millions of people on Indonesia’s heavily populated Java Island were affected by a widespread electricit­y outage on August 4 after disruption­s at several power plants, the state utility PLN said. —AFP
JAKARTA: People cross a road despite the traffic lights not working due to an electricit­y outage in Jakarta yesterday. Tens of millions of people on Indonesia’s heavily populated Java Island were affected by a widespread electricit­y outage on August 4 after disruption­s at several power plants, the state utility PLN said. —AFP
 ??  ?? PLN, State
power company blames technical issues
PLN, State power company blames technical issues

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