Orang di Maluku tidak tahu bahwa laut mereka diracunkan oleh perusahaan
nikel. Rezim Jakarta biarkan, asal duit masuk kantong penguasa. Selain itu
nelayan di Maluku hanya dibolehkan menangkap ikan dalam batas 12 n miles.
Apakah media lokal maupun yang disebut media nasional memuat berita  polusi
ini?


https://news.mongabay.com/2022/02/red-seas-and-no-fish-nickel-mining-takes-its-toll-on-indonesias-spice-islands/

Mongabay Series: Indonesian Fisheries
<https://news.mongabay.com/series/indonesian-fisheries/>
Red seas and no fish: Nickel mining takes its toll on Indonesia’s spice
islands
by Rabul Sawal <https://news.mongabay.com/by/rabul-sawal/> on 16 February
2022 | Translated by Basten Gokkon
<https://news.mongabay.com/by/basten-gokkon>
<https://news.mongabay.com/2022/02/red-seas-and-no-fish-nickel-mining-takes-its-toll-on-indonesias-spice-islands/#>

   - *Fishermen in Indonesia’s Obi Islands blame the nickel mining and
   smelting industries for the depletion of fish in their traditional fishing
   grounds.*
   - *Researchers say the pollution has turned the coastal waters into a
   “mud puddle” because of the high levels of heavy metal contamination.*
   - *One of the main mining companies there had previously proposed
   dumping 6 million tons of waste a year into the sea, but backed down
   following protests.*
   - *The company is now proposing clearing a forest area to build a
   tailings dam — a plan that activists and fishermen say is no better because
   of the persistently high risk of environmental contamination.*

HALMAHERA, Indonesia — Yoksan Jurumudi came home with a long face after
spending the whole day looking for fish in the waters off the Obi Islands
in Indonesia’s North Maluku province. The fisherman dumped out his catch,
but it was only enough to feed his own family. There was nothing left over
that could be sold, let alone shared with his extended family.

The days when the fishermen of Obi Island would land a bounty of skipjack
tuna have long passed, they say. It now takes them at least three days of
fishing, venturing increasingly farther out to sea on their small wooden
*ketinting *canoes, to bring back just 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of tuna.

“It’s certainly harder now to look for fish in the Kawasi Sea,” Yoksan,
referring to the main fishing area in the region, told Mongabay Indonesia
in an interview last September.
Nickel mines and smelters abound across Obi Island in North Maluku
province, Indonesia. Image by Rabul Sawal/Mongabay Indonesia.Nickel mining
began in the Obi Islands in 2007 and has since spawned a smelting industry.
Image by Rabul Sawal/Mongabay Indonesia.

Like many other local fishers, Yoksan blames the disappearance of the fish
in the waters around the Obi Islands on the expansion of the nickel
industry. First came the mines, in 2007, followed since then by smelters
that refine the metal into battery-grade quality. During that time, locals
say, there’s also been an undeniable degradation of the environment in and
around the Obi Islands.

“I’m now over 50 years old, so I know very well the situation with the
marine fish,” fisherman Umar Dahada told Mongabay Indonesia.  “When it’s
the rainy season, the sea turns red. I can’t fish there.”

The 42 islands that make up the Obi archipelago are part of eastern
Indonesia’s famed “spice islands.” For centuries they produced mainly
cloves, nutmeg and pepper. They’re also home to a rich diversity of marine
life, sitting inside the Pacific Coral Triangle.

But in addition to spices and biodiversity, the Obi Islands are also rich
in minerals, including gold and coal, but principally nickel. The metal is
in high demand for use in electric vehicle batteries, and prices recently
hit an 11-year high
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-01-20/metals-rally-heats-up-as-nickel-hits-24-000-on-supply-snarls>
on
supply concerns.

Indonesia is the world’s top nickel producer
<https://pubs.usgs.gov/periodicals/mcs2021/mcs2021-nickel.pdf>, with the
government pushing for increased mining and refining. That includes in the
Obi Islands, where national and provincial authorities, in a show of
support for the industry, approved in 2019 a request by mining company PT
Trimegah Bangun Persada to dump 6 million tons of waste into the ocean each
year
<https://news.mongabay.com/2020/05/indonesian-miners-eyeing-ev-nickel-boom-seek-to-dump-waste-into-the-sea/>
.
The waters off the southern coast of Obi Island have turned red due to
pollution from the nickel mines and smelters. Image by Rabul Sawal/Mongabay
Indonesia.

Known as deep-sea tailings disposal (DSTD), this type of dumping is already
practiced by copper and gold miners in Indonesia — with devastating impacts
on local ecosystems, activists say.

The approval of Trimegah’s DSTD plan inflamed existing concerns about
environmental damage in the Obi Islands, and prompted fishers and
environmental activists to stage several protests outside the North Maluku
governor’s office and the local branch of Trimegah’s parent company, the
Harita Group.

The company eventually backed down in the face of the protests, cancelling
the DSTD plan
<https://kumparan.com/ceritamalukuutara/harita-group-tidak-lanjuti-izin-penempatan-limbah-ke-laut-1vFjEJsG281/3>;
however, the North Maluku government has not yet officially revoked its
approval. Anie Rahmi, a spokeswoman for Harita’s nickel division, told
Mongabay Indonesia in a statement
<https://www.mongabay.co.id/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Harita-Nickel-.pdf> that
the group’s mining activities complied with all environmental protection
standards imposed by the government.

Trimegah, in its search for somewhere else to dump its waste, last July
submitted a request to clear a forest on the main island of Obi to build a
tailings dam. Environmental activists say this isn’t any better than the
DSTD plan, given that the potential discharge of contaminated waste from
the facility could pollute the surrounding ecosystem and eventually make
its way to the sea.

“In addition, heavy metal dissolution by rain and oxidation by air may
expand the extent of the pollution,” said Ahmad Rusydi Rasjid, executive
director of the North Maluku chapter of Walhi, Indonesia’s biggest
environmental NGO.
Children play in water that researchers call a ‘mud puddle’ because of the
high levels of heavy metal contamination. Image by Rabul Sawal/Mongabay
Indonesia.

But even as Trimegah awaits approval for its proposed tailings dam,
research reportedly funded in part by the company itself shows that mining
and smelting activity have already polluted the fishing grounds around the
Obi Islands.

The 2019 study by scientists at North Maluku’s Khairun University, which
was never published, indicates that levels of heavy metals associated with
nickel mining are higher than normal off the southern coast of the main
island. It also found traces of these heavy metals in at least 12 marine
species, including saltwater clams, mangrove snappers, oxeye herrings, and
yellow-striped trevallies.

“My presumption is simply that the Kawasi Sea isn’t suitable anymore for
wildlife … It’s turned into a mud puddle,” said Muhammad Aris, a co-author
of the study and marine biologist at Khairun University.

“So if the fishermen say they can’t find fish anymore, that’s because
they’re gone,” he added. “When the environment is already damaged, there’s
nothing that humans can do.”

Aris also warned against eating fish harvested from the polluted waters.

“The people of Obi Island could die … from eating the contaminated fish,”
he said. “Does it have to take a high mortality rate or mass fish die-off
to realize this? We must be aware now and not let it happen.”


*This story was reported by Mongabay’s Indonesia team and first
published here
<https://www.mongabay.co.id/2021/12/22/moncer-baterai-kendaraan-listrik-suram-bagi-laut-dan-nelayan-pulau-obi-1/>
and here
<https://www.mongabay.co.id/2022/01/03/moncer-baterai-kendaraan-listrik-suram-bagi-laut-dan-nelayan-pulau-obi-2/>
on
our Indonesian site <http://www.mongabay.co.id/> on Dec. 22, 2021, and Jan.
3, 2022.*

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