*Apakah Pertamina akan dituntut membayar denda karena pencemaran
lingkungan?*

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/08/06/environmental-recovery-from-pertamina-oil-spill-may-take-half-a-year-officials.html
*Environmental recovery from Pertamina oil spill may take half a year:
Officials*

   -

   Arya Dipa, Ardila Syakriah and Kharishar Kahfi

   The Jakarta Post
   -

   Bandung and Jakarta   /   Tue, August 6, 2019   /   02:31 pm

Environmental recovery efforts following the recent oil leak from state
energy giant Pertamina’s Offshore North West Java (ONWJ) Block may take
more than six months, officials have said, as residents have reportedly
begun to bear the brunt of the damages.

The oil spill follows a gas well kick incident, an unplanned and often
violent release of gas caused by low pressure in a wellbore, on July 12 in
an exploration well called YYA-1, beneath PHE’s ONWJ offshore platform
located 2 kilometers north of Karawang, West Java.

Initial reports showed that the oil spill had only affected 11 villages in
Karawang and Bekasi, West Java, and seven beaches in the province, but the
Thousand Islands administration said on Friday that the spill had
reached seven of its southern islands on July 22.

Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti said that the
government and Pertamina would need at least six months to conduct
environmental recovery efforts in the affected areas.

"There will certainly be continuous conservation and recovery programs to
address the impacts of the oil spill. We hope that physical recovery could
proceed quickly, we will do as best as we can," she said after observing
Karawang and Thousand Islands on a chopper on Thursday, as quoted in the
ministry's press release.

West Java governor Ridwan Kamil said that Pertamina and affected
administrations had agreed to resolve the issue within the next eight
months at the latest, which would be divided into two stages.

"The first stage is two to two and a half months of emergency responses.
The recovery period will proceed for the following two to six months.
Economic, psychological and environmental impacts must be recovered,"
Ridwan said in Bandung, West Java, on Friday.

He ensured that Pertamina would take full responsibility of the recovery
efforts, which he said included employing affected residents to help clean
up the waters so they could still earn an income.

The oil spill has reportedly contaminated residents' salt, shrimp and milk
fish farms, leading to lower or even no production at all as farmers and
fisherfolks are forced to halt their activities.

President director of the company's upstream business subsidiary Pertamina
EP, Nanang Abdul Manaf, claimed on the same occasion that the company had
employed around 5,000 affected residents to clean up the shores.

"We are calculating the losses [...] while involving local
administrations," he said.

Dwi Sawung of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) said that
the oil spill could harm marine life and plants, as shown by dead fish
found by fisherfolk in Karawang. He said that mangrove trees in some areas
had also been affected, noting that a deeper look into the environmental
impact should be immediately conducted to measure the damage.

He demanded transparency from Pertamina and the government regarding data
on the affected areas and the extent of the damage as residents had the
right to know about the state of the environment they were living in as
stipulated in the 2009 law on environmental protection and management.

"Pertamina should also install ambient air quality monitoring devices to
detect air pollutants in the affected villages, because some residents have
complained of headaches from the stench of the oil spill. I'm afraid there
will be long-term health effects," Sawung said.

Funds for environmental recovery efforts should also be under close watch
given the involvement of the local and central administration, putting them
at risk of being corrupted, he said.

Pertamina corporate communication vice president Fajriyah Usman told the
*Post* on Saturday that the company had begun fixing the broken well on
Friday. The company will close the well permanently.

"Our strategy is to maximize off-shore management to ensure minimal
impact onshore," Fajriyah said.

To contain the oil spill, Pertamina has deployed 37 monitoring ships and
stretched out more than 2,000 meters of static oil booms, a temporary
floating barrier used to reduce the pollution on shorelines.

It has also hired United States well control company Boots & Coots, which
handled the massive Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

The company has shut down its operations in the ONWJ block, where the wells
in the YY project were previously able to produce 3,000 barrels of oil per
day (bopd)

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