Indonesian capital plan throws china-backed rail link into disarray

Indonesian capital plan throws china-backed rail link into disarray


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PACIFIC MONEY | ECONOMY | SOUTHEAST ASIA The Chinese-Indonesian consortium building the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail line says that projected demand has fallen by nearly half. Indonesia’s


plan to shift its capital from Jakarta to a remote location on the island of Borneo is set to inflict a further setback on a Chinese government-backed high-speed rail project that has


already experienced repeated delays. According to the head of Kereta Cepat Indonesia China (KCIC), the consortium of Chinese and Indonesian state-owned enterprises that is coordinating the


Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail project, it could be 40 years before the rail line begins to turn a profit, around twice the current estimate. The 142-kilometer rail line is set to link


Jakarta to the city of Bandung in West Java, greatly easing congestion along one of the busiest travel corridors in densely-populated Java. But President Joko  “Jokowi” Widodo’s official


announcement that he will shift the capital to a purpose built city called Nusantara (“archipelago” in Javanese) in East Kalimantan in 2024, another attempt to ease Java’s world-beating


congestion, has weakened the business case for the high-speed rail link. According to the Jakarta Post, Dwiyana Slamet Riyadi, the president director of KCIC, told a parliamentary hearing on


Monday that the projected demand for the railway, based on a recent third-party review, had fallen to just 31,215 passenger trips per day, just over half of the 61,157 estimated in a 2017


feasibility study. “Looking at the investment value, number of passengers and ticket prices, it’s very difficult to follow the earlier feasibility study where the assumption of a return on


investment will occur within 20 years,” Riyadi said, noting that the time taken to reach the break-even point for the project was now projected to take around twice as long. Riyadi also


confirmed earlier reports by the state-owned railway operator Kereta Api Indonesia (KAI), which is part of the KCIC consortium, that the project faces a serious cost overrun, with its total


price tag likely to come to $7.9 billion, more than $2 billion more than the $5.5 billion expected  when the project was first agreed in 2015. Delays and cost overruns have plagued the


Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail project since Jokowi awarded the contract to a consortium of Chinese state firms in 2015, over a competing Japanese bid. In October, the Indonesian government


announced that it would use the state budget to cover the ballooning costs on the project, prompting calls for the government to renegotiate the project with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Most


of the price changes are due to the rising prices of materials and machinery, COVID-19-induced labor shortages, and delays caused by the complex process of land acquisition along the


railway line. According to KCIC, the control of which is split 60-40 between Indonesian and Chinese state-owned enterprises, the project was nearly 80 percent complete as of the beginning of


this year. Reuters reports that KCIC plans to commence a trial run on part of the line by the end of this year and to complete the project by June 2023 – just in time for the tenth


anniversary of the BRI.