Jakarta's plan to up stakes may need $30 billion in
investment: minister
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[April 30, 2019]
By Tabita Diela
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's plan to
move its capital off the main island of Java will require investment of
about $20 billion to $30 billion, a minister said on Tuesday, even
though the government has yet to decide on a new location.
President Joko Widodo on Monday approved a plan to relocate government
offices away from Jakarta less than two weeks after private pollsters
indicated he had won an April 17 presidential election.
Jakarta is home to more than 10 million people, but around three times
that many live in the surrounding towns, adding to severe traffic
congestion that the government estimated costs $7 billion in economic
losses each year.
Bambang Brodjonegoro, Widodo's planning minister, said the government
will design a new capital to house 900,000 to 1.5 million people, mostly
government employees and their families.While most government offices
will be relocated, the central bank as well as financial and investment
authorities will likely stay put, Brodjonegoro said.
"Creating a new capital is not creating a second Jakarta. This new
capital is only for the center of government," Brodjonegoro told
reporters.
The plan could cost 323 trillion rupiah to 466 trillion rupiah ($22.66
billion to $32.7 billion), he said, adding that planning, designing and
construction would take up to 10 years.
The government does not know the new location but the president asked
online where people thought the capital should be, prompting more than
100,000 comments.
Some wanted the city in their part of the archipelago, while others were
less welcoming.
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Indonesia's Minister of National Development Planning Bambang
Brodjonegoro gestures during an interview with Reuters in Jakarta,
Indonesia August 25, 2016. REUTERS/Iqro Rinaldi
An Instagram user muhammad_ramdhani021 said he did not want
the capital to be moved to a possible contender Palangkaraya in Central
Kalimantan province on the island of Borneo.
"Let our city remain green and beautiful, unpolluted. If you decide to move to
Palangkaraya, we the natives will be pushed aside."
Indonesia suffers from intense seismic activity in many areas and Brodjonegoro
said the capital would be an area with a lower natural disaster risk, such as
the eastern part of Sumatra, Borneo or the southern side of Sulawesi islands.
Analysts welcomed the plan, particularly after recent flooding in parts of
Jakarta highlighted the vulnerability of the low-lying capital that is sinking
due to over-extraction of ground water.
The Economist Intelligence Unit said migrating the capital made sense for
long-term development and sustainability, though it warned that there were
significant challenges.
(Additional reporting by Bernadette Christina Munthe and Fransiska Nangoy;
Editing by Ed Davies and Nick Macfie)
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