{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 1724358,
        "msgid": "south-jakarta-to-stop-sending-waste-to-bantargebang-in-2027-where-will-it-go-next-1778158505",
        "date": "2026-05-07 18:06:18",
        "title": "South Jakarta to Stop Sending Waste to Bantargebang in 2027: Where Will It Go Next?",
        "author": "Mohamad Bintang Pamungkas",
        "source": "KOMPAS",
        "tags": "",
        "topic": "Regulation",
        "summary": "South Jakarta's administration aims to cease sending waste to the Bantargebang landfill by 2027, following directives from the Minister of Environment that prohibit DKI Jakarta from using the facility starting next year. To manage this, the focus will shift to on-site processing of organic waste, which constitutes over 50% of the total, using communal methods like jumbo biopori and modern teba systems. This initiative addresses the high volume of food waste and wood\/branches, promoting local decomposition to reduce transportation and landfill dependency.",
        "content": "<p>The South Jakarta Administration aims to stop sending waste to the\nBantargebang Integrated Waste Processing Site starting in 2027. This\ntarget emerged following instructions from the Minister of Environment\nstating that the Bantargebang site will no longer accept waste from DKI\nJakarta from next year. So, if waste is no longer disposed of at\nBantargebang, how will South Jakarta manage it? \u201cThe quickest way to\nhandle waste is to process it right on the spot. So it won\u2019t be\ntransported far to Bantargebang anymore,\u201d said Hendrik when met at the\nSouth Jakarta Environmental Office, on Wednesday (6\/5\/2026), quoted from\nAntara. This means that waste will no longer be entirely transported to\nthe final disposal site, but instead processed directly in each\nrespective neighbourhood. Organic waste is prioritised because it is the\nlargest contributor to waste accumulation in Jakarta. Based on data from\nthe National Waste Management Information System (SIPSN), food waste\naccounts for 49.87% of total waste. Meanwhile, wood and branch waste\ncontributes around three percent. Thus, the total organic waste in South\nJakarta is said to exceed 50% of the overall waste generation. That\norganic waste includes: \u201cThose two types of organic waste are our\ntargets, to be processed using jumbo biopori and modern teba, which are\nplanned to be distributed throughout South Jakarta,\u201d said Hendrik. Jumbo\nbiopori is a large-capacity container, like a used 30 to 120 litre\nbucket, used communally to process organic waste. Meanwhile, modern teba\nis a waste processing system based on Balinese local wisdom, consisting\nof a 2-3 metre deep composting hole reinforced with concrete and\nequipped with a lid.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/south-jakarta-to-stop-sending-waste-to-bantargebang-in-2027-where-will-it-go-next-1778158505",
        "image": ""
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}