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Chevron says it got the leak under control on 13 November |
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Disaster Management. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Kamis, 15 Desember 2011
Chevron faces $10.6bn Brazil legal suit over oil spill
BBC News, 15December 2011
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Prosecutorsin Brazil are demanding $10.6bn (£6.8bn) from US oil company Chevron forenvironmental damage caused when one of its oil wells leaked off the coast ofRio de Janeiro.
Theprosecutors also asked the court to immediately suspend the operations ofChevron and its drilling contractor, Transocean, in Brazil.
Brazil hasalready fined Chevron $28m for the spill on 8 November.
A Chevronofficial said the company had not yet been notified of the suit.
Theprosecutors who brought the case argued that "Chevron and Transoceanweren't capable of controlling the damages from a spill of 3,000 barrels ofoil, which proves a lack of environmental planning and management".
They alsoaccused Chevron of keeping information from Brazil's oil regulator, known by itsinitials ANP.
Chevron hasbeen banned from drilling any new wells for at least three months, while theANP investigates the spill.
Chevron hasaccepted full responsibility for the leak.
The companysaid it had underestimated the pressure of underwater oil deposits whiledrilling, causing oil to rush up the bore hole and seep into the surroundingseabed.
Senin, 07 Februari 2011
Jakarta sinking fast in wake of construction boom
Hans David Tampubolon, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 02/07/2011
A recent study concluded that land subsidence in Jakarta accelerated at an alarming pace in the past four decades, and if no remedial measures were taken, the northern part of the city could sink below sea level in the next decade.
Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) researcher Heri Andreas said the persistent inundation of North Jakarta would only get worse in the future.
“Several areas in the northern coastal region of Jakarta will subside by 60 centimeters by 2020. In 2050, the area could sit 2.2 meters lower than in 2008,” said Heri, who is also a member of the Jakarta Coast Defense Strategy (JCDS).
Heri predicted that if no action was taken to mitigate land subsidence, flooding and high tides would contribute to 5,100 hectares of land in North Jakarta being submerged in 2020 and another 6,000 hectares in 2050.
A worst-case scenario, however, put the figures at 16,200 hectares in 2020 and 18,100 hectares in 2050.
“In this scenario, the northern coast of Jakarta could be 2 meters under water by 2020 and 6.9 meters under water by 2050,” Heri said.
Global sea levels have risen at a rate of about 1 to 2 millimeters per year on average, and this rate is expected to increase to 5 millimeters per year by 2050.
A recent study by ITB showed that the sea level in the Jakarta northern coastal region rose at a rate of 5.7 millimeters per year.
The most recent finding by the JCDS showed that around 40 percent of land in Jakarta was already below sea level.
Given the finding, the JCDS predicted that within between the next 10 to 20 years, 50 percent of the city would lie below sea level.
The JCDS data also showed that between 1974 and 2010, the Muara Karang area in North Jakarta had sunk 4.1 meters. West Cengkareng in Tangerang had sunk 2.5 meters in the same period.
The Daan Mogot area in West Jakarta and Ancol in North Jakarta sank 1.97 meters and 1.88 meters respectively in the same period.
Between 1974 and 1982, land subsidence rates were not as significant as today. The problem became worse after the region saw a construction boom in property and industry.
A number of dikes constructed by the city, including in Muara Angke, Muara Karang, Pluit, Cilincing and Marunda, are no longer capable of holding back the water that has increased rates of land subsidence.
Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo recently admitted that the city was sinking at an alarming rate.
“We have no other choice but to construct a new embankment in Jakarta Bay,” Fauzi said.
He said the city needed a giant seawall to protect the capital from flooding, but added that construction could only begin in 2025.
The construction of the seawall is a joint project run by the city administration and the JCDS, which is funded by the Dutch government.
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Selasa, 25 Januari 2011
Govt urged to declare extreme weather national disaster
Antara News, Tue, January 25 2011
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Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The People`s Coalition for Fisheries Justice (Kiara) has asked the government to declare the current extreme weather conditions a national disaster as they were preventing thousands of Indonesian fishermen from making their living.
"There are 53 districts and cities in Indonesia which have been impacted by the present extreme weather conditions and 550,000 people are being victimized. Looking at the facts, we urge the government to declare present extreme weather conditions a national disaster," Kiara Secretary General M Riza Damanik said here on Tuesday.
Riza also criticized the divergence between the data collected by Kiara and those issued Marine and Fisheries Ministry where the latter stated extreme weather had impacted 41 districts and cities in Indonesia and a total of 473,983 people.
"The ministry fails to count the damage done in several areas. In Jakarta province, for example, the ministry only studies areas such as Muara Angke and Thousand Islands while there are also other areas like Cilincing, Marunda and Kali Baru where the fishermen cannot go to the sea due to bad weather," Riza said.
Meanwhile Secretary to an NGO called Coalition of Indonesian Traditional Fishermen (KNTI) Dedy Ramanta said the government was slow in handling the problem faced by fishermen.
He suggested the government to set up an insurance system for Indonesian fishermen to help them survive when harsh conditions happened. He also said the government must accurately note the number of fishermen impacted by extreme weather in Indonesia. Such action was needed to ensure that aid was given to the right persons, he said.
Extreme weather in Indonesia is predicted to last until April 2011.
Rabu, 19 Januari 2011
Half a Million Indonesian Fishermen Affected by Bad Weather
Jakarta Globe, Armando Siahaan, January 20, 2011
Jakarta. Almost half a million fisherman from 20 Indonesian provinces have been unable to go out to sea because of the bad weather affecting the country, a government minister said on Thursday.
To help the nearly 474,000 fishermen whose livelihoods had been affected by the situation, Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Fadel Muhammad urged district heads and governors to dip into rice reserves and funds from the Social Affairs Ministry.
He said, based on the ministry’s calculations, that 13,721 tons of rice were needed for the affected fishermen and their families.
According to a Social Affairs Ministry regulation, in a time of social disaster, the government could distribute 0.4 kg of rice per person for two weeks.
Social Affairs Minister Salim Segaf Al Jufri told reporters that his ministry had approximately Rp 540 billion ($59.4 million) in deconcentration funds distributed to regional governments, which could be used to help the fishermen and their families. A deconcentration fund is the central government’s money handed to provincial administrations for various development programs.
“District heads, governors, please do something to help the fishermen that were affected by the extreme weather,” he said.
The extreme weather has already caused significant flooding and damage to several provinces, including in parts of Java and East Nusa Tenggara.
“The extreme weather is expected to last until April, although the daily situation will fluctuate,” Kukuh Ribudianto, from the National Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency (BMKG), said on Sunday.
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Sabtu, 27 November 2010
4,000 Indonesian islands may disappear due to global warming
Antara News, Saturday, November 27, 2010 20:47 WIB
Makassar (ANTARA News) - Around 4,000 islands in Indonesia may disappear when the sea surface rises due to global warming, a government official said.
"Global climate change could cause the sea level to rise high enough submerge 4,000 islands in Indonesia," William Suhandar, deputy to the head of the Presidential Work Unit for Development Management and Supervision (UKP4), said here Saturday.
As many as 4,000 of Indonesia`s 17,500 islands might disappear if the sea level rose by two meters, he said.
"This will be unavoidable if global warming continues causing the sea level to keep rising as happened thousands of years ago when ice bergs melted," he said.
The earth`s surface temperature had risen 0.7 degrees Celsius over the last 100 years, he said, adding that this was tangible and reasonable evidence of climate change.
Moreover, the period 1995-2010 had been recorded as the hottest in the last 150 years since 1850, he said.
"There has been an unusual shift in rainfall patterns so that it is now difficult to distinguish the seasons, to differentiate the rainy from the dry season," he said.
Extreme weather and temperatures which occur every year could lead to or trigger natural disasters, he said.
He aid there were two major causes of climate change. One was mismanaged land utilization, deforestation and carbon emission from fossil fuels that exacerbate the green house effect in the atmosphere leading to rising global temperature.
The increasing global temperature could cause the sea level to rise and this posed a threat to around 4,000 islands in Indonesia, he said.
Mitigation of and adaptation to climate change could be advantageous to minimize the effect of global warming and climate change, he said.
Sabtu, 30 Oktober 2010
Surfers survived tsunami on resort's upper floor
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Sebastian Carvallo was showing surfing videos to fellow guests on his last night at an island resort off western Indonesia when the powerful earthquake struck. When he heard a distant roar two minutes later, he knew instantly that he had to run.
The Chilean surfer grabbed his computer and his camera, rounded up the other guests and rushed to the highest spot they could find: the third floor of the thatch-roofed beach resort.
From that vantage point overlooking the lagoon, Carvallo and the others had a terrifying front-row seat Monday night as three towering waves of a tsunami struck, shaking the building so violently they thought it would collapse.
It was there they huddled together and rode out the waves that killed at least 400 people in the Mentawai island chain off about 80 miles (130 kilometers) off Sumatra.
"It was noise and chaos. You can hear the water coming, coming, coming," Carvallo, 29, said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press.
"And then before the second wave hit the building, everyone was screaming and when the wave hit the building you could only hear people praying," he said.
A videographer, Carvallo managed to shoot the frenzied moments of panic inside the Macoroni Surf Resort on North Pagai.
He estimated that two of the waves were at least 16 feet (5 meters) high. Early reports said there was only one wave that was 10 feet (3 meters) high, but some witnesses have since described one or more waves that were taller.
The Mentawai islands are revered by surfers for their consistently high swells and perfectly formed waves breaking on their shores in the Indian Ocean. Dozens of surfing resorts and wave-chasing boats operate there and after the tsunami, many have lent their boats to the relief effort.
Carvallo was wrapping up an eight-week stay on North Pagai, where the resort owner had hired him to make promotional videos.
Having traveled to the Mentawais once before for the surf, he had jumped at the chance — provided he still had time to catch a few waves too. He had been planning one last surf in the morning before he left because the forecast was for unusually big waves.
On Monday, Carvallo was showing some surfing videos he'd shot earlier in the day to other guests — all surfers or surf instructors — on the ground floor of the resort's restaurant when the earthquake struck at 9:42 p.m.
"Two minutes later, we heard this huge noise, like a train out of control. We just ran to the top of the building," he said.
Carvallo, who owns a surf tour company in Chile, said his childhood in his seismically active homeland taught him to seek higher ground after an earthquake near the coast. He urged everyone to run to the top floor — even persuading a few guests who he said wanted to keep drinking beer at the bar.
Incredibly, all 19 guests and eight Indonesian staff at the resort survived — even though five people were caught outside.
Two of them climbed palm trees to escape the high water and three others wrapped their arms around tree trunks and clung for their lives.
Carvallo described the ordeal as "the scariest moment in my life."
After daylight Tuesday, Carvallo shot video of destroyed villas and the debris on the shore.
By Friday, Carvallo was out of the tsunami zone and headed back to Chile, grateful to have survived. "At the moment, I'd like to be safe," he said.
Still, he said he'd almost certainly return to Indonesia one day, perhaps to the same islands.
"In my opinion, Mentawais is a paradise," he said. "It's a perfect place for surf in the world. And the people are very nice."
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Rabu, 27 Oktober 2010
Hospital ship KRI Soeharso sent to Mentawai
Antara News, Wednesday, October 27, 2010 20:35 WIB
Surabaya, East Java (ANTARA News) - The naval hospital ship KRI Dr Soeharso has cancelled a journey to Wasior, Papua, and is now preparing to sail to Mentawai to help tsunami victims there.
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Naval hospital ship KRI Dr Soeharso |
"The ship was supposed to leave today for Wasior but last night the commander of the National Defense Forces (TNI) told the navy chief of staff to cancel the plan and ordered it to go to Mentawai instead," Eastern Fleet Command spokesman Lt Col Yayan Sugiana said here on Wednesday.
The hospital ship is scheduled to leave for Mentawai on Thursday morning and would be there for a month.
"The ship was initially scheduled to conduct a humanitarian mission in Wasior (recently hit by flash floods) for a month. So its task in Mentawai will be the same," he said.
The ship would carry logistics such as food, beverages and medical supplies initially allocated for flood victims in Wasior.
The ship will also carry navy personnel and 22 doctors and nurses experienced in varius disciplines.
He said the Esatern Fleet Command is still waiting for further orders from the TNI commander and the navy chief of staff on assigning more ships to Mentawai.
"For the time being we will send one because three naval ships from the Western Fleet command have already been sent there," he said.
Five naval ships from the Eastern fleet command are now still in Wasior including the KRI Kalakay that carried logistical supplies from Manokwari, Papua.

Several ship crews carry aid into KM Labobar ship at Teluk Bayur port in Padang, West Sumatra, on Friday. Bad weather had hampered distribution of aid and volunteers from Jakarta and Padang to tsunami-hit Mentawai Islands. (JP / Antara/Yudhi Mahatma)
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'No alert' in Indonesian tsunami
BBC News, 27 October 2010 Last updated at 13:43 GMT
A crucial link in Indonesia's tsunami warning system was not working during Monday's tsunami because it had been vandalised, says an Indonesian official.
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Whole villages were wiped out by the tsunami |
Hundreds of people were killed and many are missing as a result of the tsunami, which was generated by a magnitude 7.7 earthquake off the west coast of Sumatra.
The earthquake unleashed a 3m-high (10ft) wave that crashed into the remote Mentawai islands, levelling a number of villages.
Survivors have said no warning was given.
Ridwan Jamaluddin, of the Indonesian Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology, told the BBC's Indonesian service that two buoys off the Mentawai islands were vandalised and so out of service.
"We don't say they are broken down but they were vandalised and the equipment is very expensive. It cost us five billion rupiah each (£353,000; $560,000).
Another official, from the Indonesian Climatology Agency told the BBC's Indonesian service that both tide gauges and buoys are used to detect a tsunami, but the buoys are more important to generating an early warning.
"To predict a tsunami, we need the data from the buoy and the tide gauge, which is located near the beach. The buoy is more important because it is on the sea, so it will record the wave much quicker that the tide gauge," said the official, named Fauzi.
Difficulties
Residents of the Mentawai islands have told the BBC they heard no tsunami warning.
"There was not any siren to warn people in Sikakap [a small town on North Pagai island]," said Ferdinand Salamanang.
"Yes there was a quake and tsunami detection system in our port, but they are broken down. We did not hear any warning this time."
Almost exactly two years ago Indonesia launched its new tsunami early warning centre, designed to give people in coastal areas enough time to escape any waves before they reach land.
- Recorder on seabed measures pressure and sends data to buoy.
- Buoy also detects changes in sea level and motion. Tide gauges, usually sited on land, detect tidal changes.
- Information is transmitted via satellite to ground stations which assess risk of tsunami.
The project was launched after the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami, which hit the country in 2004.
A quarter of a million people on the ocean shores died, more than half of them in the Indonesian province of Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra and close to the earthquake's epicentre.
The system was meant to be completed in 2010 but it is still a work in progress, says Tiziana Bonapace, a disaster risk specialist with the UN.
"Earthquake and sea-level monitoring systems are in place, but what has proven more difficult is how to get warnings out to remote areas in time," she told the BBC.
"This remains the weakest link in the system, and unfortunately the tsunami hit one of the farthest outlying islands. Further exacerbating the situation is that buoys do malfunction, and many countries have been experiencing difficulties in this regard."
'Too late'
A more difficult challenge, she said, was instilling at the community level an awareness of the potential for disasters and how to prepare for them.
Even if the system had been fully functioning, the earthquake struck so close to the islands that an alert may not have given residents enough time to escape.
"Pagai island is very close to the epicentre, so the waves reached Pagai island in just five or 10 minutes," Ridwan Jamaluddin said.
"Even if the buoy is on, it is still too late to warn the people."
That view is echoed by Andrew Judge of SurfAid International, a humanitarian agency that has worked in the area for 10 years.
"The distance from the epicentre was very short... there's no time to act" on an alert, he told the BBC.
The Mentawai islands are very remote and communications are very difficult, he said. "Those people wouldn't have been reached by an alert."
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Selasa, 26 Oktober 2010
Australian charter boat rushes to surf camp after tsunami
News.com.au, By Fred Pawle and Sallie Don, October 26, 2010 5:31PM
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The Southern Cross has gone missing with nine Australians on board |
- 7.7-quake hits Indonesian islands
- Aussie charter boat hit by 3m wave
- Fears for nine missing Aussies
- Volcano watch: Red alert for eruption
THE father of an Australian surfing guide missing after a powerful undersea earthquake struck off the coast of Indonesia says he hopes his son is simply out of mobile phone range.
Chris Scurrah, formerly of Melbourne, was the skipper on board the Sumatran Surfariis charter boat Southern Cross when the 7.7-magnitude quake hit Kepulauan Mentawai, off Sumatra's west, last night.
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Missing Southern Cross skipper Chris Scurrah |
A staff member of the Padang-based company said the Southern Cross has not made contact since the quake.
"There is one boat that we haven't been able to make contact with, the Southern Cross," Yuli, a staff member of the Padang-based company said.
"Among the passengers there are nine Australian citizens."
On board are Chris Scurrah, his fellow skipper Akinori Fujita from Japan, and eight other Australians.
Chris's dad, Hal Scurrah, said he had yet to hear from his son but hoped to have contact soon.
"My feeling is that he's possibly out of range, and hopefully he's all well," Mr Scurrah said.
"I keep watching news, and I keep trying to text him or contact him on Facebook. He'll have a laptop with him.
"Generally he's not out of contact for a long time because often they will go into a sheltered spot or into a local town for supplies. That's when they can make contact, too."
Chris Scurrah survived last year's 7.6-magnitude earthquake in Indonesia, texting his family that he was running inland after the quake hit Padang, home to nearly a million people on the coast of Sumatra.
More than 1100 people were killed during the quake last October.
Mr Scurrah said the family was used to his son being in dangerous situations.
"(It's) something we sort of live with," Mr Scurrah said. "We're always on our toes."
Mr Scurrah said he hoped his son was north of the area hit by the quake, as that was generally the direction he headed on surfing adventures lasting between 12 and 14 days.
"I think he's probably been out for three or four days," he said.
"Hopefully, he should be making contact pretty soon."
But Surfaid's Mentawai Islands Program Manager Tom Plummer said the missing boat had been close to the quake's epicentre.
"There are genuine fears," he said.
The Sumatran Surfariis charter boat company says it has not been able to contact its boat Southern Cross since the 7.7-magnitude quake hit Kepulauan Mentawai, off Sumatra's west, last night.
Earlier, another Australian charter boat was rushing to the surf camp at Macaronis Resort to find out what damage was inflicted by a tsunami that hit the region last night, The Australian reported.
The camp is at a break known as Macaronis, in the southern Mentawais.
Three boats were anchored nearby last night. Two of the boats were smashed into each other by the tsunami.
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The Southern Cross has gone missing with nine Australians on board / Supplied |
One, the Midas, was destroyed. All passengers - mostly Australian surfers - are safe and accounted for.
Charter boat Freedom III is on its way to the Macaronis Resort to see what damage was inflicted, and whether the guests had been injured.
“Freedom III is on its way there now, to do its duty of care,” said World Surfaris manager Shaun Levings. “We’re still waiting on a report.”
Asked if he was concerned about the resort, Mr Levings said: “Absolutely. It’s not looking too good for them.”
The Macaronis Resort is owned and run by Australians. “The owners have put years of work in building this beautiful resort,” Mr Levings said.
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