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Why Jakarta is sinking - YouTube
Channel: Vox
[3]
This is Waladuna Mosque in Jakarta.
[6]
Its聽roof is in ruins.
[9]
Moss covers the walls.
[10]
And sea water flows
through every corner of it.
[14]
The last time people prayed here was聽in 2001,
back when it was above ground.
[19]
Today, it鈥檚 a warning sign.
[23]
It signals what could happen to Indonesia鈥檚聽
capital city if things don鈥檛 change soon.
[29]
Because, even though Jakarta
faces the same sea rising levels
[32]
as聽other coastal cities around the world,
[35]
that鈥檚 not quite what we鈥檙e looking at here.
[39]
Jakarta is sinking.
And it鈥檚聽been sinking for decades.
[45]
These blue areas show just how much聽
the city has sunk since the 1970s.
[50]
The darker the area gets, the more it's dropped.
[53]
Here's how much it's descended today.
[56]
Most of the sinking happens here,
in the north聽coast,
[59]
where Jakarta meets the Java Sea.
[62]
Here, the land is sinking by about 25 cm a year,聽聽
[66]
destabilizing the area,
damaging homes,
[69]
and聽upending people鈥檚 lives,
over and over again.
[84]
Many residents here are fishermen, who need聽
to live by the coast to make a living,
[89]
but, further inland, Jakarta鈥檚 more than聽
10 million residents are also at risk.
[96]
A huge portion of the city, and the聽homes of
millions, could be underwater聽by 2050.
[102]
Jakarta sits on a聽
swampy plain, on low coastal land.
[106]
It has 13 rivers that drain through it.
[109]
But the reason the city is sinking
[111]
is actually聽that most people here
don鈥檛 have enough water.
[118]
Most Jakartans lack access
to clean, piped water.
[121]
Instead, they get their water聽
by digging wells like this one.
[125]
The pumps go deep into the ground to聽
extract the water stored in aquifers,聽聽
[130]
underground layers of rock
that hold groundwater.
[133]
The porous spaces of the rock
are filled with it.
[136]
Multiply this by a few million,聽
and you have a problem.
[140]
Think of the rock as a soaked聽sponge:
[143]
the more water is extracted,
the more it deflates,
[146]
causing the soil to compact聽and collapse,
and the ground above it to sink.
[152]
Pumps alone shouldn鈥檛 be able to do this.
[155]
While some layers of earth
will never recover their water,
[159]
aquifers聽are usually
refilled naturally when it rains.
[162]
But in Jakarta, that鈥檚
becoming increasingly rare.
[166]
For decades, Jakarta has been
developing at聽a fast pace,
[170]
and is now covered in concrete.
[172]
So the rainfall that would usually fill聽up
the aquifers isn鈥檛 being absorbed.
[181]
It鈥檚 gotten so bad that in
coastal areas prone to flooding,
[185]
like the fishing community Muara Baru,
[188]
people have built makeshift bridges聽
to move through their neighborhoods.
[192]
Combined with sea level rise,
[194]
it's also made floods during high tide
and rainy seasons much more dangerous.
[199]
Like in 2007, when Jakarta
experienced one聽of the worst floods
[204]
in its modern history.
[206]
A storm and high tide caused rivers
and canals聽around the city to overflow,
[211]
killing 80 people.
[219]
Maksim has already lost
his home to the sinking,
[222]
and now sleeps on his fishing boat.
[225]
And聽Nondho has had to rebuild
his home several times.
[241]
Groundwater pumping is putting聽
Jakarta鈥檚 survival at risk.
[245]
But to understand how it got
into this situation聽to begin with,
[249]
you have to go back centuries.
[254]
In the 1600s, when European聽
powers were colonizing the world,聽聽
[257]
the Dutch took over what was then聽
the port town of Jayakarta.
[262]
They razed it to the ground,
and in its place, built聽Batavia:
[266]
a headquarters for their growing empire.
[268]
They began to rule over the Indonesian,聽聽
[270]
Chinese, Indian, and Arab people聽
who had lived there for centuries,聽聽
[275]
and built their new city
in the Dutch style,
[277]
with narrow townhouses
along a grid of canals.
[281]
The canals were used for trade, defense,聽
and to make Batavia feel like a Dutch city.聽聽
[287]
But look at Batavia from above,
[289]
and you can聽see the city grid
served a darker purpose, too.
[316]
If you look closely, you'll notice聽
that there aren鈥檛 many bridges
[319]
between the two sides,
or between the聽blocks.
[323]
This was by design.
The Dutch were outnumbered.
[327]
So, in order to聽control the local
population, they divided it.
[331]
It looked like this.
[333]
Pretty much every聽group was
confined to their city quarter.
[338]
The Dutch ruled over the local
population like聽this for over a century.
[342]
But that聽began to change
in the mid-1700s.
[347]
Because the Dutch didn鈥檛 properly maintain聽
the canals, they began to deteriorate,聽聽
[351]
and sediment from earthquakes聽
blocked the flow of water.
[354]
The water in the canals turned聽
stagnant, and soon, deadly.
[373]
As disease spread through the canals,
[375]
the聽wealthier Dutch moved
south of Batavia,
[377]
where they began to develop a new聽
colonial administrative center.
[381]
But, despite the death and disease, the聽Dutch
continued to leave the canals聽untreated.
[386]
Instead, they began to use piped water.
[390]
In the 1870s, they developed the聽
first centralized water supply,聽聽
[394]
with iron pipes to
distribute water to homes.
[397]
The pipes provided clean drinking聽
water and indoor bathrooms.
[401]
But the pipes were concentrated in these聽
areas, where the Dutch had moved to.
[406]
The indigenous population was left in聽
informal settlements, called "kampongs,"
[410]
far from the piped water.
[412]
And this created聽a new
kind of division in the city.
[429]
Native residents had to rely聽
on street vendors for water.
[433]
But most often, they were forced to get聽
their water from the neglected canals.
[438]
It took decades before pipes were聽
finally built in these communities.
[442]
And when they were, it would聽
only be a few public standpipes.
[464]
This continued through 1949.
[467]
After an armed conflict, the Dutch finally
recognized聽Indonesia鈥檚 independence, and left.
[475]
The legacy they left behind
was a sprawling city,
[478]
built on marshland,
and segregated by water聽access,
[482]
that, now, Jakartans had to deal with.
[485]
Over the next decades,聽
Jakarta鈥檚 population skyrocketed.
[490]
More people required more housing,
more stores,聽and more streets.
[494]
And the city expanded fast.
[497]
But its water infrastructure still聽
doesn鈥檛 serve the majority of the city.
[502]
This chart shows how much of聽
Jakarta鈥檚 population has piped water.
[506]
It was 12 percent in the 50s, and聽
is still under 50 percent today.
[511]
Many of the people without
access to piped聽water
[514]
have no other choice but to keep
pumping groundwater聽to survive.
[518]
And the city continues to sink.
[522]
The situation has gotten so bad,
[523]
the Indonesian government has talked聽
about moving the capital, from Jakarta,
[528]
to the neighboring island of Borneo.
[530]
But that won鈥檛 help the millions聽
of people living in Jakarta.
[536]
To save the city, in 2014, the聽
government announced a project,聽聽
[540]
in collaboration with a
Dutch architecture firm,
[543]
to build and reinforce
120 km of seawalls,
[547]
to stop the water from flooding聽
the land as it sinks.
[550]
But so far, only these 10 kilometers
have been聽reinforced.
[555]
Like this one in Muara Baru.
[558]
The problem is that, just like the rest聽
of Jakarta, the seawall is sinking.
[571]
The project also includes an
ambitious聽$40 billion plan
[575]
to build a 38 km wall,
shaped like a massive bird,
[579]
to protect the coast from flooding.
[581]
But this project could take聽
up to 30 years to complete.
[585]
And by then, Jakarta could have聽
lost most of its coastal land.
[603]
Jakarta will continues to sink until聽
groundwater stops being pumped.
[608]
And groundwater will
continue to be pumped
[611]
until the government
provides an alternative.
[614]
This has been done before.
In the 1950s,
[617]
Tokyo managed to stop severe聽
sinking by providing piped water.
[621]
Taipei, Shanghai, Bangkok,聽
are other cities in the region聽聽
[625]
that have managed to
stop their cities聽from sinking.
[628]
But time is running out.
[642]
Jakarta has been free of Dutch rule
for聽a little over 70 years now.
[647]
But the way the Dutch
built their city, carved it up,
[650]
and聽restricted its water,
plagues it to this day.
[654]
Jakarta is sinking into the sea.
[656]
And, until its聽government figures out how
to provide clean, piped water for its citizens,
[662]
that will continue to聽be its reality.
[665]
For as long as it鈥檚 still here.
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