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View all search resultsThe Jakarta administration is set to develop disposal-transit facilities for hazardous and toxic waste (B3) in four places in Jakarta, including in Semper, North Jakarta, as each year electronic waste generates up to 3 tons of B3 alone.
An Indonesian subsidiary of a Thai coal mining company operating in East Kalimantan has been fined Rp 2 billion (US$145,000) for dumping nearly 4,000 tons of hazardous coal waste on an open dump, which is considered illegal in Indonesia.
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