A plan to
build a billion-dollar dam to stop Indonesia's capital Jakarta from sinking
into the sea has been launched. The project will take 30 years to complete, and
create housing and jobs for almost a million people.
The Garuda
is a powerful, mythical creature, and the emblem of the Republic of Indonesia.
It originally comes from an Indian myth, in which the creature – half-man,
half-eagle - steals an elixir from the gods that promises immortality. The
Jakarta metropolis is now trying to ensure its own future, by building the
"Great Garuda" – a 35-kilometer-long protective wall in the shape of
its namesake. The wall is placed on the country's coastline a few kilometers
out to sea, designed to protect Indonesia's capital from the rising sea level.
Sinking
metropolis, rising sea
The
situation for the bustling metropolis is alarming. Built on a former swamp,
Jakarta is serviced by drains largely left over from the Dutch colonial area.
There is virtually no functioning waste disposal system, and clean water is in
constant demand. So much groundwater is pumped into the city that the soil
level sinks by about seven centimeters per year – in some districts this
doubles to 14 centimeters. Meanwhile, ongoing climate change is seeing sea
levels rise around the world. "This combination means that in 10 to 15
years large parts of Indonesia will be underwater," says Victor Coenen,
team leader with Dutch construction company Witteveen + Bos' Jakarta office,
who is the main contractor on the construction of the wall. At least half a
million people will be directly affected by the wall's construction.
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| A graphic of the finished Garuda dam project |
The Garuda
dam project will help provide clean drinking water for Jakarta's residents
Now, in a joint
initiative between the Indonesian and Dutch governments, a rescue plan has been
formulated – one that will radically change the entire city's coastline. Behind
the gigantic protective wall several lagoons will be built, acting as
catchments for the thirteen rivers that flow into the Java Sea, while hopefully
also helping to stop the annual flooding of parts of the capital during the
rainy season. "All these rivers are so dirty we thought we should try
tackle this problem at the same time," Coenen told DW. So that the lagoons
don't also become polluted, sewage and water treatment plants, as well as
garbage disposal infrastructure, will be built throughout the city. In
addition, the dam is equipped with large pumping stations, helping to provide
drinking water for the city's residents.
Integrated
into the cityscape
During the
project's implementation, both governments will rely on the expertise of
several Dutch construction companies who already have experience with similar
projects along the Dutch coast – though not on a scale like this. "Various
components of this plan have already been implemented elsewhere in the
world," says Coenen, referring, for instance, to the 30 kilometer-long
Afsluitdijk, which has separated the IJssel River from the North Sea in his
homeland since the 1930s. "What has not been done," the engineer
continued, "is to completely integrate such a mammoth dam into a
cityscape. There we are definitely entering uncharted territory."
Furthermore,
behind the dam, on several artificially- created islands, a whole new
neighborhood will rise, with housing for around 300,000 people and 600,000 new
jobs. For this to happen the current coastline will have to be extended seven
kilometers out into the sea. "This housing is desperately needed for a
rapidly expanding Jakarta," says Coenen. "At the same time, the wall
will have to be integrated into the new coastline. The difficulty lies in
running the wall through the city, so that's it not easily recognisable."
A mammoth
task
The
"Great Garuda" wall in Jakarta is truly a mammoth project. It will
cost up to 40 million US-dollars to construct, and is estimated to take around
35 years to complete. "It will be one of the three largest dams ever built
in the world," says Victor Coenen. But he is confident the purely
technical side at least will not be too problematic. "Many construction
companies can handle a project like this. They have already proven they can do
it."
More
difficult is the financing, and the management of the project, which the
Indonesian government is looking after. "If you just build a dam, that's
no problem. Just sign a contract with a building contractor, you pay, and he
delivers," said Coenen. "But if you are essentially building an
entire new city, then there are so many contractors that it can be almost
impossible to keep all the finances under control" – especially in a country
like Indonesia, where rampant corruption remains a major problem.
"Large
projects always involve large risks," said Coenen. But Jakarta is running
out of time, and the engineer believes in the success of the project, even if
he will not be in office when it is completed. By 2030 the dam will be
standing, "but only in the middle of the century," said Coenen,
"will the entire project be completed." This means it could take
another 40 years for Garuda to lay his protective wings around Indonesia's
capital.
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