[sustran] fwd Indonesia vehicle pollution news

SUSTRAN Resource Centre sustran at po.jaring.my
Tue Apr 25 10:09:59 JST 2000


The Jakarta Post 
City News      April 25, 2000  
 
Leaded fuel ban unlikely before crisis ends

JAKARTA (JP): State Minister of Environment Sonny Keraf indicated on Monday
that the switch to unleaded fuel would be applicable only after the
prolonged economic crisis is over. 

"It's difficult to enforce the use of unleaded fuel nationwide because of
economic constraints. 

"We need to wait for the economic recovery before we can expand the
capacity of our unleaded fuel production," he told reporters during his
visit to an automobile repair shop which provides a free vehicle emission
check in Tanah Abang, Central Jakarta. 

"The Balongan fuel refinery plant in Indramayu, West Java, produces 30
percent of our national consumption of unleaded fuel, which is just enough
to supply the Greater Jakarta area," he said. 

The government had set Jan. 1, 2000 for the capital to be free of leaded
fuel, and 2003 for the nation. 

The visit was held in conjunction with the commemoration of Earth Day on
April 22. Deputy Governor for Development Affairs Budihardjo Sukmadi, head
of City Environmental Impact Management Agency Aboejoewono Aboeprajitno,
City Council speaker Edy Waluyo, and officials from Swisscontact, a Swiss-
based international environmental agency, were also part of the group. 

The program to check emission levels of vehicles is conducted by the city
administration in cooperation with Swisscontact. There are 117 stations
participating in the program, which started April 17 and runs until May 14.
Sonny took the opportunity to have his new Volvo sedan checked, and the
reading was still below the maximum standard. 

The maximum standard emission level set by city administration for vehicles
using gasoline is 4.5 percent carbon monoxide, 11 percent carbon dioxide, 2
percent oxygen and 1,200 ppm (parts per million) hydrocarbon. 

The city administration will require emission-free certificates from
residents who want to obtain vehicle documents. 

"The authorized institutions which will check vehicles are automobile
repair shops. They have the equipment and the manpower," said Aboejoewono. 

"We'll also build an online computer system linking the stations to the
city administration for this purpose," he added. 

It is estimated that there are some two million private cars in the city.
In total, some 300 stations are needed to check cars. 

Each station will be equipped with a computerized gauge which will display
the vehicles' emission levels automatically. The stations and operators are
required to have a certificate before they are allowed to check cars. 

Sonny said, however, that checking vehicles' emission levels was not the
only way to ensure clean air in the country. 

"This program alone will not be enough to ensure clean air. The government
still has a lot to do, such as limiting the age of vehicles running on the
streets, and producing unleaded fuel," he said. 

Although the service is a pilot project, vehicle emission tests have proven
to be promising business for repair shop owners. 

"We have had at least ten new customers a day since the program began," the
owner of the Nawilis repair shop on Jl. Tanah Abang I, Central Jakarta,
Peter Nawilis, told The Jakarta Post during the minister's visit. 

"Most new customers only ask for the free emission check, but at least they
have become more familiar with my repair shop," he added. 

"And I'm willing to pay any amount of money to get the vehicle emission
check certificate as it will help boost my business." 

A Swisscontact official, Heru, said 90 percent of the cars checked were
found to emit a high content of harmful gas because of errors in their
engines' tune-up. 

"Most times, we don't have to make major repairs, but just calibrate the
carburetor's setting. It's simple, isn't it? But it profoundly affects
engine performance and air quality," he said. 

"Routine inspection and maintenance are also important for maintaining the
engine's condition," he added. (09/nvn) 

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Distributed for the purpose of education and research.

A. Rahman Paul BARTER
SUSTRAN Resource Centre
P.O. Box 11501, Kuala Lumpur 50748, Malaysia.
E-mail: sustran at po.jaring.my

Information services for the Sustainable Transport Action Network
for Asia and the Pacific (the SUSTRAN Network)
http://www.malaysiakini.com/sustran



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