http://www.atimes.com/article/headed-nowhere-fast-on-javas-road-of-dreams/


Headed nowhere fast on Java’s road of dreams The Trans-Java Highway, a
2,167 kilometer road designed to better connect world's most populous
island, will badly miss its 2019 completion deadline

By John McBeth <http://www.atimes.com/writer/john-mcbeth/> Java, June 4,
2018 2:31 PM (UTC+8)


[image: An official drives a motorcycle during an inspection at a new toll
road Salatiga-Bawen section in Salatiga, Central Java province, Indonesia
June 8, 2017. Photo: Antara Foto/Aloysius Jarot Nugroho via Reuters]

An official drives a motorcycle during an inspection at a new toll road
Salatiga-Bawen section in Salatiga, Central Java province, Indonesia June
8, 2017. Photo: Antara Foto/Aloysius Jarot Nugroho via Reuters

While the focus in Jakarta is on the showpiece mass-rail transit systems
now transforming the capital’s skyline, the Trans-Java Highway — a project
of potentially much greater economic significance — is still far from
completion nearly four decades after it first began.

The 2,167-kilometer, four-lane tollway will eventually link Merak in the
west to Banyuwangi in the east, the two ferry-crossing towns on either end
of the world’s most populous island, home to 141 million of Indonesia’s 260
million people.


Despite President Joko Widodo’s urging – and 600 kilometers of highway
already opened across the country under his watch – officials concede that
barely half of the Trans-Java Highway is fully operational, 400 kilometers
remains under construction and the rest is still subject to land issues.

Clearly, the project will miss its latest 2019 completion deadline and
while the progress made so far has helped ease traffic conditions, the
millions of Indonesians flocking to their home villages next week as part
of the annual post-Ramadan migration can expect many frustrating hours on
the road.

Mudik, as it is known, will see more than 30 million Indonesians on the
move at one time, most of them on Java. In cars, on motorcycles and aboard
public transport, their exodus out of Jakarta leaves the city virtually
deserted for nearly a full work week.

The 14 hours this writer recently spent driving from Jakarta to Surabaya,
Indonesia’s second biggest city, showed that after a smooth exit through
the capital’s eastern suburbs, motorists still face long stretches along
the northern coast where critical gaps remain in the highway of dreams.

[image: Indonesia – TransJava Highway – Infrastructure – McBeth-June 2018]

A new stretch of the Trans-Java Highway, June 2018. Photo: John McBeth


Surabaya is well served with a newly-opened 76 kilometer tollroad from
Kertosono in the west, but heading south towards Banyuwangi, the Trans-Java
Highway peters out at Sidoarjo, scene of the infamous Lapindo mud volcano,
with no evidence of any new road-building for the remaining 250 kilometers.

That’s another seven hours, through teak forests and coastal towns and past
the giant 5,000-megawatt Paiton power complex and coal-handling terminal,
one of the largest in the world, which supplies electricity to Jakarta and
West Java along a southern transmission line.

Whether Widodo, the man already being dubbed the “Infrastructure
President”, is around for the official opening of the historic link won’t
rest on him winning a second term in next April’s election but rather on
how much of a priority the project is given by his new administration.

A visionary in many ways, former President Suharto ensured Indonesia was
the first country in the developing world – and the first in Asia — to
operate its own domestic satellite system with the launch of Palapa A1 from
the Kennedy Space Center in 1976.

Strange, then, that land links never seemed to be a major priority the way
it has been in Thailand where, admittedly unencumbered by a population
density of 940 people per square kilometer as in Java, eight-lane motorways
crisscross the kingdom.

Indonesia’s Dutch colonial government recognized its importance in the
early 1800s, building what became known as the Great Post Road along the
length of Java’s northern coast, which cost the lives of more than 12,000
indentured Indonesian workers.

Much of the existing North Coast Road generally follows that route, but the
Trans-Java tollway cuts a new parallel path, turning south near the Central
Java province capital of Semarang and then heading east from Solo to
Surabaya.

[image: (Files) File picture dated 01 September 1996 shows Indonesian
President Suharto riding a Harley-Davidson side-car with then Research and
Technology Minister BJ Habibie in the backyard of the Maerdeka Palace in
Jakarta. Suharto was reappointed president for a seventh term 10 March and
Habibie is expected to be nominated as Vice-President 11 march on the final
day of the People's Consultative Assembly. AFP PHOTO/AGUS LOLONG / AFP
PHOTO / AGUS LOLONG]

Then Indonesian President Suharto riding a Harley-Davidson side-car with
then Research and Technology Minister BJ Habibie at the Maerdeka Palace in
Jakarta. Photo: AFP/Agus Lolong


The Suharto government built the first phase of the Trans-Java Highway, the
72 kilometer span between Merak and Jakarta, in the early 1980s; with a
bridge across the Sunda Strait still in the future, the link was always
important to handle the heavy traffic between Java and Sumatra.

But that left the rest of Java, with trucks taking three days or more to
navigate narrow, crowded roads on the journey from East and Central Java to
Jakarta, adding at least 30% to logistics costs and impacting on the
competitiveness of domestic goods.

Critics have claimed that converting 655,000 hectares of arable land for
the road — and the inevitable urban development that follows — threatens
national food security. Java currently supplies more than 50% of the
country’s rice and other staples.

But despite the laying of a second rail track between Jakarta and Surabaya,
the Trans-Java Highway remains a critical element of Indonesia’s land
infrastructure backbone in a country where 70% of freight is carried by
road.

Still relying heavily on its natural resources, Indonesia is not a
formidable trader like Thailand and Vietnam. But Jakarta’s Tanjung Priok is
Indonesia’s busiest seaport, handling more than 50% of its trans-shipment
cargo traffic.

Few wanted to admit it in later years, but under Suharto’s heavy-handed,
military-backed regime, land acquisition was never a problem when it came
to public infrastructure – or golf courses for that matter.

[image: Indonesian President Joko Widodo poses with a Royal Enfield
motorbike during his visit at Pelabuhan Ratu beach in Sukabumi, Indonesia,
April 8, 2018. Photo: Antara Foto/Puspa Perwitasari via Reuters]

Indonesian President Joko Widodo poses with a Royal Enfield motorbike
during a visit to Pelabuhan Ratu beach, Sukabumi, Indonesia, April 8, 2018.
Photo: Antara Foto/Puspa Perwitasari via Reuters

The country’s first toll road, linking east Jakarta to Bogor in 1978,
didn’t face any obstacles with the leather-clad Suharto making a ritual of
climbing aboard his Harley Davidson Softail motorcycle every Friday for a
personal inspection of progress.

Even when the principle of eminent domain was introduced under the 2012
Property Law, it could not be applied retroactively and was never rigidly
enforced anyway, which meant the long-delayed process of building the
Trans-Java Highway has continued to drag on.

Now, with mudik approaching, the Public Works Ministry promises the highway
can “accommodate” the exodus out of Jakarta, but that will mean having to
open one 40 kilometer section between the Central Java towns of Pejagan and
Pemalang before the toll gates have been installed.

Even then, motorists are confronted by the usual 120 kilometer slog through
and past the crowded towns of Tegal and Pekalongan before diverting around
Semarang and re-joining a picturesque, 60 kilometer section of the highway,
which ends far too quickly at the highland resort town of Salatiga.

Over the past year, the government’s focus on infrastructure has shifted
perceptibly to improving the quality of Indonesia’s deplorable education
system and other social development and price stabilization programs that
are more likely to attract votes.

Where that leaves the future of the Trans-Java Highway is unclear, but
after spending US$1 billion on one 116-kilometer stretch alone – and a lot
of political capital — future governments will feel they have little choice
but to get the job done. For Widodo, Indonesia’s first everyman president,
it would be his crowning achievement.

   -


Southeast Asia <http://www.atimes.com/tag/southeast-asia/> infrastructure
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/infrastructure/> Indonesia
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/indonesia/> Trans-Java Highway
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/trans-java-highway/> Joko Widodo
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/joko-widodo/> Infrastructure President
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/infrastructure-president/> Surabaya
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/surabaya/> Logistics Costs
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/logistics-costs/> Trans-Shipment
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/trans-shipment/> Suharto
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/suharto/> North Coast Road
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/north-coast-road/> Tanjung Priok port
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/tanjung-priok-port/> Ramadan
<http://www.atimes.com/tag/ramadan/>

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