Published • loading... • Updated
Indonesia Capital Faces 'Filthy' Trash Crisis
Greater Jakarta produces up to 14,000 tonnes of waste daily, stressing landfills that are already overcapacity amid weak sorting and enforcement, experts say.
- Indonesia's capital Jakarta and surrounding cities face a 'filthy' trash crisis, with landfills overflowing and unable to handle the estimated 14,000 tonnes of waste produced daily by 42 million residents.
- Experts attribute the crisis to population growth, rising consumption, and lack of sorting and disposal enforcement, with one resident expressing frustration over the government's failure to manage waste effectively.
- The government plans to invest $3.5 billion to close several landfills and reform the waste management system, with a focus on reducing household waste and changing consumption patterns.
Insights by Ground AI
45 Articles
45 Articles
Jakarta’s streets choke under mounting trash as landfills near capacity
JAKARTA, Feb 17 — Garbage-choked streets, overloaded landfills, and the fear of trash avalanches haunt greater Jakarta, as the world’s most populous metropolis grapples with a waste crisis.Jakarta and its satellite cities, known collectively as Jabodetabek, are home to 42 million people and produce up to an estimated 14,000 tonnes of waste daily.That has placed increasing strain on the approximately eight landfill sites that serve the region, wh…
·Selangor, Malaysia
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources45
Leaning Left3Leaning Right6Center15Last UpdatedBias Distribution62% Center
Bias Distribution
- 62% of the sources are Center
62% Center
13%
C 62%
R 25%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





















