Rising water levels threaten Indonesia's Jakarta

  • 2 weeks ago

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Transcript
00:00Jakarta and its 10 million inhabitants are living on borrowed time.
00:05The Indonesian capital, much of which is below sea level, is sinking.
00:10We're now three, four metres below sea level.
00:13You can see here that the house actually is the seawall.
00:16If you just go around, you can see these houses are completely integrated into the seawall.
00:21Victor, a Dutch engineer, has overseen the construction of a huge network of dikes around Jakarta.
00:28This seawall is 32 kilometres long.
00:32Built on unstable ground, the megacity sinks an average of about 10 centimetres every year.
00:39As an engineer, I'm scared.
00:41If this seawall would break, it's a tsunami of water coming in.
00:44That is a direct threat.
00:46This dike is fragile and poorly maintained.
00:49The sea seeps in beneath its foundations, meaning it could collapse at any moment.
00:54Despite the dangers, local residents seem resigned to their fate.
00:59We're used to it, so we're not afraid.
01:01Besides, we don't have a choice. My work is here. I take tourists on boat rides.
01:09Tiara Salsabila was born in one of the areas threatened by rising water levels.
01:14To try to spare her neighbourhood, she became a civil engineer.
01:17Her goal is to build higher and more resistant dikes.
01:22Without new infrastructure, there is no doubt that Jakarta will sink with more and more floods.
01:27So I wanted to get involved in saving the city.
01:32But saving Jakarta is an impossible task.
01:35That's why the government decided to move the Indonesian capital
01:38to a location more than a thousand kilometres away to the island of Borneo.
01:44It's true that a capital city should not sink, so I support this move.
01:49But does that mean the government will completely abandon Jakarta?
01:55In Jakarta, the battle against the sea goes on.
01:58And there's not a moment to waste.
02:01If nothing is done, by 2050 nearly two million people could be displaced.

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