Indonesia’s environment ministry fails to communicate risk of air pollution

According to data, Jakarta and its neighbouring province Banten have some of the world’s filthiest air. Why has the government failed to communicate the problems associated with bad air quality to Jakartans?

air pollution jakarta
Citizens in Jakarta have sued the government over growing air pollution in the Indonesian capital. Image: Joe Mud/Flickr , CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Indonesia’s Ministry of Environment and Forestry has failed to communicate the risk of air pollution in the capital, Jakarta, and surrounding areas.

Data presented on the ministry’s website shows Jakarta has good air quality, making it unnecessary to warn the public about health risks from filthy air. But data from Swiss-based app AQ AirVisual tell a different story.

According to their data, sourced from the US embassy’s air quality monitors, Indonesia’s climate agency and Greenpeace Indonesia, Jakarta and its neighbouring province Banten have some of the world’s filthiest air. This poses health risks to residents.

The ministry responded to this information by saying it’s confident that AQ AirVisual data is not accurate.

The conflicting information creates public distrust of the government, prompting a group of citizens to sue the government over growing air pollution.

Differing data

The ministry regularly monitors air quality in Indonesia through devices installed in several strategic places, such as roads or other crowded areas.

These devices compile air quality data that the ministry uses to create its Air Pollution Index (API).

This Air Pollution Index uses a scale of 0 to 300, – the website put 3,000as maximum. If the monitors read that the air quality stands between 0 and 51, that means the air is clean. If the monitors read air quality levels between 51 and 100, there’s moderate pollution. Readings between 101 and 199 mean the air can cause illness and between 200 and 299 the air is very unhealthy. If the air quality level reaches 300, that spells danger.

Based on the air quality assessment update of July 16 2019 at 9 am, Jakarta and Banten stand at 58 to 78. This level falls in the moderate category.

Jakarta’s air quality based on the Ministry of Environment and Forestry per 16 July 2019. Source : http://iku.menlhk.go.id/

According to the ministry, air quality that falls in the moderate level “would give no effect to human and animal health, but will affect sensitive plants and aesthetic value”.

Meanwhile, AQ AirVisual uses the United States Air Quality Index (US AQI), one of the most recognised air quality standards in the world. The US AQI converts concentrations of pollutants in the air into a colour-coded scale of 0-500, to easily represent the level of associated health risk.

It provides real-time air assessment with scores of 0-50 being “good” air quality that poses no threat, 51-100 “moderate”, 101-150 “unhealthy for sensitive groups”, 151–200 “unhealthy”, 201–300 “very unhealthy” and 301-500 hazardous.

Jakarta’s air quality based on the US AQI as per 16 July 2019. Source : https://www.airvisual.com/

Serpong of Banten province air quality as per 16 July 2019. https://www.airvisual.com/

The US AQI’s standard for Particulate Matter 2.5 (PM2.5), one of four common air pollutants with a diameter less than 2.5 micrometres, or smaller than a human hair, is slightly higher than standards applied by WHO.

US AQI’s standard determines that humans should only be exposed to less than 12 micrograms per cubic metre of pollutants in a year. The WHO meanwhile sets the maximum to less than ten micrograms per cubic metre per year.

For daily exposure, WHO states 25 micrograms per cubic metre as the safe threshold. However, Greenpeace Indonesia claims Indonesia’s threshold is nearly three times higher, at 65 micrograms per cubic metre.

If we follow the US AQI standards, Jakarta and Banten, which score 151-200, fall into the “unhealthy” category.

Apart from real-time air quality data, the app also provides health risk information for each score. For instance, when the air is considered “unhealthy” the app provides information that infants and the elderly might experience heart and lung problems. At this level, it recommends people limit outdoor activities and wear pollution masks.

According to their data, sourced from the US embassy’s air quality monitors, Indonesia’s climate agency and Greenpeace Indonesia, Jakarta and its neighbouring province Banten have some of the world’s filthiest air.

Clean air as an environmental right

Everyone has environmental rights to a safe, clean, healthy and sustainable environment, along with the right to seek, receive and impart environmental information.

The state must protect the environmental rights of its citizens, and Indonesia is one of the countries that has formally accepted all these environmental rights norms.

The government’s insistence that air pollution is under control creates confusion. Several mass media have reported air pollution issues caused by private transportation (such as cars and motorcycles) and industrial activities.

Previous studies have found air pollution has pulmonary health effects such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), lung cancer and respiratory infections. Researchers also found a correlation between air pollution and cardiovascular disease.

Understanding and communicating the risk of air pollution is highly important to warn the public about how it can impact them. The public has a right to know about their current environmental situation and receive clear information, not confusing or misleading information.

In this current situation, the government has failed to communicate the risk and neglected to inform and provide comprehensive environmental data assessment to the public.

Why communicate risks?

People need to know what health risks they face from air pollution. They also need to know what they can do to protect their lives, their health, their families and communities.

Experts can carry out risk communication by using social media, mass media and community engagement channels. They can communicate and share real-time information with the public whose health, economic or social well-being is threatened. This may increase public awareness and help people respond appropriately to protect themselves.

According to WHO, risk communication should be a platform for building trust between the government and the public. Having governments engaging with risk communication can lead to countries self-declaring air pollution, as China has done.

Juhri Selamet is a lecturer in the Department of Visual Communication at Multimedia Nusantara University (UMN). This article was originally published on The Conversation. 

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