Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TIMES24H
    • Hot!
      1. Vietnam
      2. Asia
      3. Video
      Featured
      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      By Mike HarrisonNovember 13, 20250
      Recent
      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      November 13, 2025
      TechTimes Editors’ Choice 2024: 9Fit eBiz Mag Stand NFC Wallet – The Most Unique Mobile Accessory

      TechTimes Editors’ Choice 2024: 9Fit eBiz Mag Stand NFC Wallet – The Most Unique Mobile Accessory

      January 8, 2025

      BCP Vietnam and Vitalify Asia Launch the First A.I-Powered Business Matching Platform

      December 20, 2024
    • World
      • PR Newswire
      • Media Outreach
      • GLOBENEWSWIRE
    • Business
      Taiwan: The Global Powerhouse Shaping the Future of AI

      Taiwan: The Global Powerhouse Shaping the Future of AI

      August 29, 2025
      MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

      MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

      July 31, 2025
      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      May 19, 2025

      BCP Vietnam and Vitalify Asia Launch the First A.I-Powered Business Matching Platform

      December 20, 2024

      POPS Reaches Huge Milestone with 10,000 Enrolled Students

      December 16, 2021
    • Life
      1. Lifestyle
      2. Recipes
      3. Fashion
      4. View All
      1win VIP Community Member Ilia Topuria Sets for Historic UFC Freedom 250 Main Event

      1win VIP Community Member Ilia Topuria Sets for Historic UFC Freedom 250 Main Event

      June 13, 2026

      The 7th Cross-Strait Financial Forum and Taiwan-Funded Enterprise Development Forum

      June 12, 2026
      Verdant Rock Receives BBB+ Long-Term Insurer Financial Strength Rating with a Stable Outlook from Fitch Ratings

      Verdant Rock Receives BBB+ Long-Term Insurer Financial Strength Rating with a Stable Outlook from Fitch Ratings

      June 12, 2026
      TVBS deploys AI translation for NVIDIA GTC Taipei keynote

      TVBS deploys AI translation for NVIDIA GTC Taipei keynote

      June 12, 2026

      Cooking tips for a smaller Thanksgiving celebration

      November 18, 2020

      Hanoi: A capital, and a kingdom of egg coffee shops

      November 16, 2020

      4 must-try recipes when you travel to Vietnam

      November 7, 2020

      Cutting-Edge Technology for Top Dentists

      December 24, 2021

      H&M faces boycott in Vietnam over “problematic map”

      April 7, 2021
      Pierre Cardin

      Ground-breaking French designer Pierre Cardin dies aged 98

      December 30, 2020
      JESSICA SIMPSON

      #HealthGoals: Jessica Simpson shows off 100 lbs weight loss in Christmas pajamas

      December 27, 2020

      Plane captain dies during Miami-Chile flight

      August 17, 2023

      French paintings of Vietnamese life a century ago exhibited in HCMC

      August 17, 2023

      Judge says accused TV contest not rigged

      August 17, 2023

      I don’t know how to tell my Christian parents-in-law I want a divorce

      August 17, 2023
    • Sport
    • Tech
      1. Gadgets
      2. View All
      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      December 12, 2024

      “Stupid windman” PC assembly experience based on Newegg ChatGPT

      March 29, 2023

      The value of the industrial cloud as an example of “the power of ecosystem, the power of expertise”

      March 29, 2023

      Machbase Releases Open Source Structured Time Series Database “Macbase Neo”

      March 28, 2023
      Taiwan Digital Day 2025

      Taiwan Digital Day 2025: Driving Vietnam-Taiwan Tech Collaboration in Ho Chi Minh City

      July 30, 2025
      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      May 19, 2025
      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      December 12, 2024

      “Stupid windman” PC assembly experience based on Newegg ChatGPT

      March 29, 2023
    Media Outreach Newswire
    TIMES24H
    Home»Asia»Indonesia banks on dams to tackle water crisis, but at what cost?
    Asia

    Indonesia banks on dams to tackle water crisis, but at what cost?

    Mike HarrisonBy Mike HarrisonMarch 6, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    But for those in their path, the work has not always brought greater security.

    In Indonesia’s Central Java province, ongoing work on the 690-hectare (1,700-acre) Bener Dam has destroyed farmer Gunawan’s small durian fruit plot, robbing him of his income.

    The 33-year-old said his land in Purworejo district was bulldozed to make way for the dam despite not being earmarked for demolition when the government published its plans for the project.

    The 2 trillion rupiah ($132 million) dam is set to be finished in 2024.

    “I’m sad and also … angry,” Gunawan – who like many Indonesians goes by one name – said in the village of Guntur, adding that he used to make 20 million rupiah ($1,318) a year selling his durian harvest.

    Now, he said, he has had little choice but to take on occasional work as a truck driver to make ends meet

    “What can we do against the government?” asked Gunawan, one of thousands of small-scale farmers and other people in the area who say they have been uprooted by the dam project.

    Facing worsening water security concerns, Indonesia is building more water retention dams, which it says are needed to supply irrigation, reduce the risk of flooding and provide a source of low-carbon hydroelectric power.

    But dam building – as with the Bener Dam – is causing its own new challenges, from upending the lives of local people to new losses of forests and agricultural land, according to residents and campaigners.

    Deforestation, in particular, can interfere with rainfall patterns and affect the ability of land to hold water, said Ully Artha Siagian, a forest and climate change campaign manager at the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (WALHI), a non-profit group.

    The Bener dam “will actually add to the burden of the threat of a clean water crisis in the future,” she said. “So, converting forest areas into dams does not answer the problem.”

    In response to concerns by campaigners, Dwi Purwantoro, an official at the Ministry of Public Works and Housing (PUPR), said by phone that dam building was important not only for boosting water security but also for better controlling floods.

    Competing needs

    As climate change impacts strengthen, countries including Indonesia are attempting to be proactive in adapting to coming changes and looking for ways to curb climate-changing emissions, such as by installing renewable energy.

    But many of the potential adaptations and emissions-cutting efforts put new pressure on limited land, with competing priorities such as protecting nature, boosting food security, mining minerals needed for the green transition and protecting land rights pitted against each other.

    In some cases, the choices made threaten to lead to social unrest, especially if communities find themselves uprooted without consent or adequate compensation. They also raise crucial questions about how to strike a balance among competing “good” uses for land.

    Indonesia in 2021 published a climate resilience development policy that outlined four priority areas for action as climate change worsens: agriculture, seas and coasts, health and water.

    In the country’s regions of Bali, Java and Nusa Tenggara, areas facing water scarcity are predicted to rise from 6% in 2000 to 9.6% in 2045, according to a 2019 study by Indonesia’s National Development Planning Agency.

    Eko Cahyono, a researcher for the Sajogyo Institute, which studies agrarian issues and the environment, said he understood why Indonesia’s government wanted to improve water security, but said that should not come at the cost of people’s livelihoods and rights.

    “If this (Bener Dam project) is indeed part of climate change mitigation and adaptation (efforts), how can the government ensure social, economic and ecological justice, so that there are no more violations of people’s rights?” he asked.

    Land losses

    According to a government land procurement plan and project map published in 2019, the Bener Dam would affect plots of land belonging to at least 3,480 people, covering a total of 600 hectares.

    In addition, a quarry being built in the area to mine stone for the dam would impact the garden plots of 617 people and an area of ​​114 hectares, the document noted.

    Some residents like Gunawan say their land was also destroyed despite not having been earmarked in the planning documents. They are now demanding compensation as a result.

    Purwantoro, the public works official, said that “regarding several residents’ land (being) outside the project map … now we are proposing changes to the map so it will be expanded”.

    Construction of the Bener Dam was temporarily halted in August 2022 following local protests, according to state-owned construction firm PT Waskita Karya, which is working on the project.

    “We still hope that there will be the best solution for the residents,” said company spokesperson Setyawan Nugroho, adding that discussions on compensation were ongoing.

    The government has offered compensation ranging from about 60,000 rupiah ($4) to 215,000 rupiah ($14) per meter of land depending on area in question. Several residents said in interviews that they had refused to accept the terms.

    Ully of WALHI said the project had led to “social conflict” in Purworejo because many people had lost their sources of food and lost green areas that had been in their families for generations.

    There have been doing between residents and police and soldiers surveying, and authorities are seeking six suspicious accusations of vandalizing a dam project office.

    The Bener Dam is a national strategic project (NSP), making it a government priority, but critics say declaration of an NSP can result in land being seized or destroyed in the name of development and the public interest.

    Dewi Kar, secretary-general Consortium for Reform (KPA) conflicts of the policy the government to review its development policy, saying it “has sparked agrarian conflicts in many places”.

    Last year, 212 such conflicts were recorded by KPA – up from 207 in 2021. They took place in 459 villages, affecting at least 346.00 people, she said.

    Outlook for women

    The Indonesian government has cited building dams as a major solution to the country’s water security worries but hydrology experts have concerns about its approach.

    Gunawan Wibisono, a lecturer at Merdeka Malang University, said Indonesia’s dam projects will result in forest losses and their effectiveness in improving sediment water security could be limited as carried downstream fill them and by a lack of focus on recharging groundwater in their design.

    None of Indonesia’s planned dam projects are intended to help boost groundwater reserves, according to Heru Hendrayana, a hydrologist at Gadjah Mada University (UGM).

    “The problem is … most (dams) are mostly for the function of collecting, not absorbing, water,” he said.

    In the village of Guntur, residents such as Gunawan and Miftakhul Hafid are determined to keep protesting against the Bener Dam – a project they feel is bringing them more problems than benefits.

    “The government must ensure … that residents’ rights are fulfilled,” said 28-year-old Hafid, a community leader.

    .



    Source: Internet

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

    Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

    November 13, 2025
    MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

    MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

    July 31, 2025
    Taiwan Digital Day 2025

    Taiwan Digital Day 2025: Driving Vietnam-Taiwan Tech Collaboration in Ho Chi Minh City

    July 30, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest News

    Innoscience Secures Final Victory in Patent Lawsuit as China's Supreme Court Upholds Injunction Against Infineon GaN Products

    June 13, 2026
    1win VIP Community Member Ilia Topuria Sets for Historic UFC Freedom 250 Main Event

    1win VIP Community Member Ilia Topuria Sets for Historic UFC Freedom 250 Main Event

    June 13, 2026

    Angel Yeast Releases 2025 Sustainability Report as Company Marks 40th Anniversary

    June 13, 2026

    Relativity Acquires Gavel to Extend its AI Platform for Legal Data Intelligence into Microsoft Word

    June 12, 2026
    DMCA.com Protection Status
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest

    © 2026 TIMES24H. All rights reserved

    TIMES24H is a global news platform delivering timely, reliable, and insightful coverage across technology, business, lifestyle, and current affairs. Our mission is to provide readers with clear perspectives and trusted information to navigate a fast-changing world.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.