TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Rivers of filth flow throughout the land

Sea of garbage: Three garbage collectors stand in piles of trash collected from the Ciliwung river at the Manggarai sluice gate in South Jakarta in this file photo

The Jakarta Post
Jakarta
Sat, July 6, 2013

Share This Article

Change Size

Rivers of filth flow throughout the land Sea of garbage: Three garbage collectors stand in piles of trash collected from the Ciliwung river at the Manggarai sluice gate in South Jakarta in this file photo. (JP/P.J. Leo) (JP/P.J. Leo)

S

span class="inline inline-none">Sea of garbage: Three garbage collectors stand in piles of trash collected from the Ciliwung river at the Manggarai sluice gate in South Jakarta in this file photo. (JP/P.J. Leo)

Domestic waste, at 80 percent, remains the top contributor to water pollution in Indonesia.

'€œBetween water, air and land pollution, the most worrisome threat turns out to be water pollution. Eighty percent of water pollution is caused by domestic activity,'€ Karliansyah, the deputy minister for pollution control at the Environment Ministry said on Thursday.

According to the '€œIndonesian Environmental Status'€ report published in June by the Ministry, 82 percent of the 52 rivers surveyed are polluted with domestic and industrial waste. The problem is exacerbated by over use of water and bad spatial planning.

The report, based on observation from 2008 to 2012, shows that the quality of water in the nations rivers is decreasing, especially in Riau, Jambi, Central Java, East Nusa Tenggara, Southeast Sulawesi and Maluku. The rivers mostly are contaminated with e-coli bacteria from human feces, indicating the poor quality of waste water treatment systems in cities and villages throughout Indonesia.

'€œSome 53 percent of the population pours domestic waste from bathing, cooking and washing, into rivers without treatment in septic tanks,'€ he told The Jakarta Post.

Every day, 14,000 tons of human feces pours into rivers, the water of which is used by communities for daily activities like washing dishes, creating risks of ailments like typhoid fever and dysentery.

Data from the Ministry has shown that from 2006 to 2011 the number of houses with septic tanks had increased from 40.7 percent to 60.3 percent. Jakarta, has the highest percentage of home septic tanks at 93.9 percent, while Papua has the lowest, at only 28.4 percent.

Many households do not have septic tanks because of lack of space, high cost and the culture of defecating in rivers.

Despite the increase in the number of septic tanks, the government can only process 5.4 percent domestic waste.

Abetnego Tarigan, the executive director of the Forum for the Environment, believes adequate water waste treatment like septic tanks are mostly are used in private housing in big cities.

'€œSome private housing complexes, including those in Jakarta, Bogor and Tangerang, provide adequate facilities like proper septic tanks,'€ he said.

The government'€™s waste water treatment does not reach people in remote areas, who remain unaware of water related environmental and health issues.

Mukri Friatna from the advocacy division of the forum pointed out that government waste treatment had focuses on industrial waste.

'€œIf the government wants to reduce the amount of water contaminated with e-coli bacteria, they should build communal septic tanks rather than merely providing industry with treatment systems,'€ he said.

The Environment Ministry plans to build communal waste water treatment centers as pilot projects in various areas.

The pilot project budget alone reaches Rp 99 billion (US$ 9 million).

'€œThis year we will build seven communal waste water treatment facilities in Lumajang and Jombang in East Java as well as in Bogor, Central Java, Sorong and Manokwari in Papua and East Nusa Tenggara,'€ he said.

Last year, the ministry built some communal waste water treatments facilities in Jakarta, Surakarta and South Kalimantan to prevent the groundwater pollution from e-coli bacteria. (tam)

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.