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Indonesia Advances Zero-Plastic Waste Ambitions with Public-Private Partnership to Build Waste Management Capacity and Capability
June 29, 2022

Bersih Indonesia: Eliminasi Sampah Plastik programme aims to serve 6.5 million people and provide a blueprint for financially sustainable waste management systems in emerging markets.

Lisbon, Portugal, June 29, 2022 – THE INDONESIAN government today announced another key milestone in its journey to fulfil waste management targets set out by the country’s National Action Plan for Marine Debris Handling and National Plastic Action Partnership (NPAP). The Coordinating Ministry for Maritime and Investment Affairs (CMMAI) together with the Malang Regency, and global non-profit organisation the Alliance to End Plastic Waste (Alliance), have partnered to launch the Bersih Indonesia: Eliminasi Sampah Plastik programme.

The project is one of world’s largest public-private partnerships for waste management and aims to contribute to better collection, sorting, and recycling of plastic waste in Indonesia. It also aims to demonstrate a financially sustainable plastic waste management model in an emerging market that can be scaled and replicated across Indonesia, and beyond.

As ASEAN’s largest economy with a population of over 270 million people, Indonesia is a key player to reduce plastic waste, both regionally and globally. In 2019, it partnered the Global Plastic Action Partnership and became the first country to introduce the National Plastic Action Partnership.

It aims to achieve a 70% reduction in marine plastic waste leakage by 2025, and near-zero plastic waste pollution by 2040. Achieving these targets will require capital investments of about US$18 billion for waste management and recycling between 2017 and 2040, with approximately US$1 billion per year in additional operational financing for solid waste management by 2040.

Implementing programmes on sustainable development and plastic waste reduction has become one of Indonesia’s national priorities. As has mobilising capital for waste management systems which are traditionally under-funded due to the challenging economics of high capital and operational expenditures as well as weak revenue streams.

In addition to enhancing collection, sorting, processing, and recycling, Bersih Indonesia was also designed to address financing challenges on two fronts—by optimising running costs and enhancing revenue streams through a combination of regency-wide collection fees plus higher income from materials.

The aim is to deploy the project in phases across three regencies in Java—Malang, Magelang and Sukabumi, serving a combined population of over 6.5 million residents. At full capacity, the three systems expect to collect a combined total of over 800,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste and divert about 140,000 tonnes of plastic waste every year with the potential to create around 8,000 jobs. The multi-year initiative has kicked off in Malang, the second largest regency in East Java. Phase One expects to serve more than 2.6 million people and will be developed at a cost of US$29 million which will be fully funded by the Alliance.

Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, Indonesia’s Coordinating Minister for Maritime and Investment Affairs, said: “Innovation and collaboration will be crucial in tackling the plastic waste problem. The Bersih Indonesia programme must be able to combine waste management models with circular economy principles to increase the economic value of plastic waste and facilitate the development of downstream ecosystems. It will pioneer new revenue streams by working with traders to create end-markets for recyclates and extract maximum value from materials including glass, paper, metal, and plastic waste. The innovative collection initiatives will further unlock value for hard-to-recycle plastic waste including flexible packaging, using it as feedstock for chemical recycling.”

Kristin Hughes, Director of the Global Plastic Action Partnership, World Economic Forum, said: “The Global Plastic Action Partnership and its national platforms were designed to drive significantly more action to match the scale of the plastic waste challenge. Multi-stakeholder collaboration reflects the responsibility that all actors—from industry to governments to the public—have to eliminate plastic waste in the environment. The Bersih Indonesia programme is representative of that kind of collective action needed.”

Jacob Duer, President and CEO of the Alliance, said: “The Bersih Indonesia programme will establish a holistic operating model that addresses waste management gaps in underserved communities. Insufficient capital investment, low profitability, lack of technical capacity and capability, and inadequate governance have historically hindered waste management, particularly in emerging markets. In particular, the scale of investment required to tackle the plastic waste problem has been a significant hurdle. This pilot programme has the potential to create a blueprint for future financially sustainable waste management projects in underserved communities around the world.”

“The Alliance and its partners are committed to the strong, smooth implementation of Bersih Indonesia. And we look forward to delivering a waste management system that supports Indonesia’s plastic waste-free ambitions while benefitting local communities” he concluded.

They were speaking on the side of the UN Ocean Conference in Lisbon.