Maretha Uli, Jakarta – A new report has once again highlighted the heavy toll of Indonesia's nickel industry, where decades of poorly regulated extraction have scarred landscapes, choked coral reefs and eroded local livelihoods, while companies face little accountability.
Environmental groups Auriga Nusantara and Earth Insight documented massive deforestation and coral destruction in Raja Ampat, Southwest Papua, where sediments from nickel mining have smothered reefs and turned once-crystal waters into murky red, with little to no restoration carried out.
"Some companies have stopped for more than a decade, but the coral reefs have been destroyed by unremoved sediments. Natural recovery will take much longer," Auriga marine researcher Parid Ridwanuddin said at the report launch in Jakarta last Thursday.
Until earlier this year, mining concessions in Raja Ampat covered about 22,000 hectares, encroaching on a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Global Geopark and endangering 2,400 ha of coral reefs, along with the livelihoods of some 64,000 residents who depend on tourism.
"Who really benefits from mining? Only the companies. Local residents are left poorer as their natural resources are destroyed," Parid said.
Auriga argued that systematic problems lie in the country's mining permits and environmental impact assessments (AMDAL), which often rubber-stamp operations instead of curbing damage.
"In Indonesia, AMDAL is designed to allow extraction, not to stop it," said Auriga mining and energy researcher Ki Bagus Hadikusuma, noting that enforcement against AMDAL violations remains weak and government actions usually come only after public outcry.
In June, the government revoked the permits of four out of five companies operating in Raja Ampat, leaving PT Gag Nikel, a subsidiary of state-owned mining firm PT Antam, free to continue operations. The revocations followed the release of activist videos showing severe damage to the islands' fragile ecosystems.
The government did suspend PT Gag Nikel's operations over alleged environmental damage, but earlier this month reauthorized the company to resume activities to allow an "environmental audit" that, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry said, can only be conducted while operations are ongoing.
Tri Winarno, the ministry's director general for coal and mineral mining, did not immediately respond to The Jakarta Post's request for comment.
More harm
Environmental and community impacts have also been reported in Halmahera, North Maluku, where watchdog Mining Advocacy Network (JATAM) identified 127 permits, about half for nickel, covering 655,000 ha.
In May, eleven residents of Maba Sangaji village in East Halmahera were charged under laws on threats, weapons possession and mining obstruction after staging a customary ritual protest against PT Position nickel operations.
Residents said the company operated without community consultation, damaging forests and rivers, as well as disrupting livelihoods dependent on farming, forest products and fishing.
"The river has changed color and is mixed with mining mud, disrupting our livelihood. We are also afraid of being poisoned when making sago with this water," a resident told the Post during a virtual meeting hosted by Amnesty International Indonesia in late August.
JATAM campaigner Hema Situmorang said the case, labeled a strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP), was only a small part of a larger nickel problem in Halmahera, where hundreds of residents have faced criminalization for opposing mining.
"The nickel industry has polluted rivers and seas, destroyed forests, poisoned bodies and now criminalized villagers," she said, noting the irony that extracting a material central to electric vehicle batteries, promoted by the government as part of the green economy, has brought devastation to its source regions.
Nickel is a crucial material for EV batteries. Indonesia holds the world's largest nickel reserves and is the top global producer of the metal used in EV batteries and stainless steel.
PT Harum Energy, parent company of PT Position, denied wrongdoing and said it complies with AMDAL and holds all required permits.
"PT Position has always carried out environmental management and monitoring in line with its operations. Therefore, if there are allegations of river pollution linked to PT Position, if such pollution does exist, it was likely caused by other factors unrelated to PT Position," CEO Ray Antonio Gunara told the Post on Sept. 11.
Source: https://asianews.network/unchecked-nickel-mining-fuels-environmental-social-crises-in-indonesia