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Indonesian presidential vote highlights tradeoffs between fast growth and a healthy environment

by News Desk
1 year ago
in International, Top News, World
Indonesian presidential vote highlights tradeoffs between fast growth and a healthy environment
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JAKARTA, Indonesia (news agencies) — A presidential election in Indonesia, the world’s third-largest democracy, is highlighting choices to be made as the country seeks to profit from its rich reserves of nickel and other resources that are vital to the global transition away from fossil fuels.

President Joko Widodo capitalized on Indonesia’s abundant nickel, coal, oil and gas reserves as he led Southeast Asia’s biggest economy through a decade of rapid growth and modernization that vastly expanded the country’s networks of roads and railways.

Increasingly, voters are demanding that the men vying to succeed him address the tradeoffs between fast growth and a healthy environment in the world’s fourth most populated country.

Indonesia has the world’s largest reserves of nickel — a critical material for electric vehicles, solar panels and other goods needed for the green energy transition.

It’s also the biggest producer of palm oil, one of the largest exporters of coal and a top producer of pulp for paper. It also exports oil and gas, rubber, tin and other resources.

In recent years, surging commodity prices have fueled fast economic growth and helped Indonesia become a middle-income country. That growth is expected to slow as the boom loses steam, according to a World Bank report.

The downside of rapid expansion of logging, mining and other resource extraction has been razing of rainforests, pollution of coastal waters and waterways and smoggy cities.

President Joko Widodo — who must step down after a second term due to a constitutional two-term limit — prioritized economic growth, welcoming foreign investments in manufacturing and other industries and building infrastructure such as the country’s first high-speed railway.

He also has championed his legacy project of moving the capital from traffic-congested, polluted Jakarta, which is flooding as the city of 11 million sinks, to Nusantara, a new city under construction on the tropical island of Borneo.

To speed up development of key industries, Widodo banned exports of certain raw commodities such as nickel and bauxite, which is used to make aluminum, obliging companies to build refineries to process and add value to what Indonesia sells to the rest of the world.

The candidates to take his place are Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto; the former governor of the capital Jakarta, Anies Baswedan; and the governor of Central Java, Ganjar Pranowo. All say they will continue that strategy, with slight variations, said Josua Pardede, chief economist at Indonesia-based Permata Bank.

The export ban has its drawbacks. Under Widodo, Indonesia is negotiating a critical materials trade deal so that it can benefit from U.S. tax credits for electric vehicles that extend to U.S. free-trade agreement partners. But Washington would expect Indonesia to relax its limits on exports.

Economists say the country needs a more open trade and investment environment to transform itself into a manufacturing hub for electric vehicle batteries and other competitive products. “As EV batteries need more than just nickel, Indonesia must engage with many countries, including those with internationally-oriented automotive industries,” said Arianto Patunru, an economist at Australian National University.

The project to move the capital has been lambasted by environmentalists and Indigenous communities that say the mammoth undertaking will degrade the environment, further shrink habitats of endangered species such as orangutans and displace Indigenous people that rely on the land for their livelihoods.

It’s also a drain on national finances.

“There seems to be very little appetite from foreign investors towards (the new capital),” said Patunru. “That means, if the government forces its development, it will involve inefficient and unproductive allocation of resources.”

Another campaign issue: food estate programs, massive plantations the government set up to fortify national food security. They have come under fire for causing massive deforestation and land conflicts with Indigenous peoples, and for their ineffectiveness.

Presidential candidates Subianto and Pranowo say they are committed to the programs. Baswedan has criticized them for neglecting local community needs and failing to grow suitable crops, pointing to the failure of cassava fields at a food estate in Kalimantan.

Many voters believe Indonesia needs a greener and more inclusive approach to growth, says Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara, executive director of the Indonesia-based Center of Economic and Law Studies.

In 2021, coal-rich Indonesia was the world’s ninth-largest source of carbon emissions that are causing global warming, according to a report by the International Energy Agency.

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