Jokowi’s
two-pronged approach to floods
Diaz Hendropriyono ; The writer is
studying at the Center for Public Administration and Policy at Virginia Tech,
An alumni of the National Resilience Institute (Lemhannas) batch 49
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JAKARTA
POST, 22 Maret 2014
Floods
have been a problem for Jakarta since the early 17th century.
The
Dutch devised various networks of canals, waterways, dams and reservoirs to
mitigate the effects of flooding in the city, but unfortunately, flooding has
continued.
Today,
Jakarta still struggles with the same problem, which now comes with much
bigger social and economic impacts. The Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (Kadin) estimated that losses associated with the 2013 floods
reached at least Rp 20 trillion (US$1.75 billion), an increase on the Rp 5
trillion of seven years ago, based on the National Development Planning
Board’s estimation, and at least 41 were killed, while tens of thousands were
displaced.
In flood
risk management literature, there are two viewpoints that are not always
applied together as a policy. The first holds that human beings have the
capacity to tame floods through the modification and engineering of flood
defenses.
This
view, the structural approach to flood risks and the management of flood
plains, has traditionally focused on the development and maintenance of
various flood protection mechanisms, such as dikes, levees, dams, reservoirs
or other man-made structures.
And
while structural flood risk mitigation can reduce the likelihood of floods in
the short-term for the area nearest to the levees, they can have ancillary
effects on the water table or nearby wetlands that actually lead to a
long-term increase in flood likelihoods and severity. In short, no
engineering structure can guarantee protection for people living on a flood
plain.
Alternatively,
managing flood risks needs to be associated with human behavior and how the
human occupancy of flood plain areas alters those risks.
Gilbert
White, an American scholar, pioneered the research that links human behavior
to flooding. White argued human beings should work with floods rather against
them, and that human behavior needs to be adjusted in flood plain management.
He was
one of the first to argue that a non-structural approach needed to be
incorporated into efforts to reduce flood risks, instead of relying heavily
on structural flood mitigation approaches. These non-structural approaches
range from land zoning or land use regulation, the development of flood
warning systems, home or community modifications to better withstand floods,
or population relocation.
Flood
risk management in Jakarta under the leadership of Governor Joko “Jokowi”
Widodo contrasts with the approaches of his predecessors. He has worked to
balance structural with non-structural approaches and has been showing the
results of his determination. With 40 percent of Jakarta’s 10 million
population living below the sea level, it is obvious that structural flood
risk mitigation efforts are a priority.
The
governor has been revitalizing various dams, such as in Pluit or Ria Rio. The
results are showing an impact. The Pluit Dam has enlarged its catchment area
after families living around the dam were relocated. The budget for various
flood-related projects has also increased two-fold this fiscal year to Rp 5.5
trillion.
It
should be emphasized that while budgets are not the only indicator of an
organization’s capacity to respond to its environment, they show the
organization has a strategic plan.
However,
it is not Jokowi’s structural flood risk mitigation approach that should be
the focus here. The structural flood risk mitigation policy that Jokowi has
pursued does not differ much from his predecessors. It is his effort to
emphasize the modification of human behavior living in flood-prone areas that
makes him stand out from his predecessors.
Jokowi
has been working to relocate and resettle thousands of families living in
watershed areas (around several dams and families living on the riverbanks)
and this should put those watersheds back to their original function. It should
be noted that his efforts to relocate thousands of families from flood prone
areas, without substantial resistance and conflict, shows his ability to
balance structural and non-structural flood risk mitigation efforts.
Such an
approach is important because people’s development choices often further
produce hazardous conditions. The settlement of hazardous areas has destroyed
local ecosystems that can provide protection from natural perils.
In
addition, the governor has been working on a campaign to increase people’s
awareness of the effects of treating the rivers as places to dump trash,
along with a proposed stiff penalty for those who continue to do so.
This
broad and comprehensive view of flood risk mitigation is critical. Various
research has shown that in order to be effective, a flood risk mitigation
approach is to be produced through a combination of physical, technological,
social and institutional variables.
However,
challenges remain. Jokowi’s novel two-pronged approach is not a panacea to
the laundry list of problems that Jakarta has. We have to remember and accept
the fact that Jakarta will always live with floods. Its position compared to
the sea level, the rivers that crisscross the city, its population density,
and global climate change are only a few of the causes of floods in the city.
The biggest challenge is building the political will to affect policy
not only at the provincial level, but more importantly at the national level.
The change of policy at the national level would impact on resource
allocation, policy coordination and more importantly, citizen participation
in improving communities and lives. ●
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