World Bank warns tidal flood may hit Jakarta next week

The Associated Press ,  Jakarta   |  Thu, 05/29/2008 4:15 PM  |  Jakarta

The World Bank warned Thursday that an exceptionally high tide could inundate the Indonesian capital next week, forcing thousands of people to flee homes and cutting off the highway to the international airport.

The situation - exasperated by global warming and the fact that Jakarta is sinking up to 2 inches (6 centimeters) a year - could mean flooding will exceed last November's roof-high levels in the hardest-hit areas, said Hongjoo Hahm, the bank's infrastructure expert.

"This is just the beginning," he said, as he pointed to homes reaching a mile (1.5 kilometers) inland that will likely be affected Tuesday and Wednesday by the 18-year semiannual tide cycle. "It's getting worse and worse."

Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago nation, is one of the world's largest contributors of carbon dioxide emissions, thanks to the rapid pace of deforestation. But experts say the country is also at risk of becoming one of the biggest victims of climate change.

Rising sea waters especially pose a threat to coastal cities like Jakarta, which has sunk at least 7 feet (2 meters) in the last three decades because of excessive ground water extraction, said Hahm.

Eventually, the government should consider building a Dutch-styled dike to protect the Jakarta Bay, he said, "but that will cost billions of U.S. dollars."

One reason for the exceptioally high 18-year tide cycles was the combination of the moon's gravitational pull and an anomaly in sea level caused by earth's own atmospheric pressure, he said. (*)

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