Economic Development

Much work to be done improving Indonesia’s infrastructure

December 30, 2013

Asia

December 30, 2013

Asia
Scott Younger

Director

J Scott Younger is a recognised leader in infrastructure development across Asia. He has held a range of senior academic, consulting and business-development roles in Hong Kong, Thailand and Indonesia over the past 35 years. He currently serves as director of Nusantara Infrastructure and as commissioner for the East Bali Poverty Project.

Over the past eight years he has been increasingly involved in the coal industry, particularly with regard to a wide range of supporting infrastructure. He is a director of Prime Pacific Coal and Prime Pacific Gold (Singapore). Mr Younger is also president commissioner of Glendale Partners, a leading infrastructure, natural-resources, renewable-energy and consulting firm based in Jakarta; chairman of the EuroCham working group on infrastructure; and senior vice chairman of the International Business Chamber, with a particular remit to report on infrastructure. He is a current member of the EuroCham board and a former member of the board of the British Chamber of Commerce (1996–2004 and 2010–12). He has served as project manager and consultant on many road and water-sector programmes in Asia funded by the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank. 

Mr Younger has published many journal and proceedings papers in the field of infrastructure and is a regular speaker at conferences. He is also a regular columnist for the regional business magazine Globe Asia, a writer for Forbes and an honorary research fellow of Glasgow University. He holds degrees in engineering from Glasgow University, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Hong Kong.

In 2011, the Indonesian government unveiled a framework document for developing the country in six corridors that stretch right across the archipelago, with infrastructure development emphasised as the foundation for the successful implementation of most of the other key identified growth target areas, including mining, agriculture and tourism.

However, delivery of regional projects has been hampered by poor preparation. This in turn reflects a parallel need to greatly improve the human resources capacity of local government and construction companies, along with the skills of regional professionals and education generally. Projects that come forward are invariably not in a bankable condition, and there has usually been inadequate thought on the best way to implement them, whether it is through wholly government endeavour or with the participation of the private sector.

The government has been promoting the public–private partnership (PPP) approach for infrastructure projects, but with a general lack of success. Again, much of this failure comes from poor preparation and poor understanding of the challenges involved. Particularly, there is an inadequate focus in government on what is needed to attract private sector interest to these projects. In addition, several potential players in infrastructure have commented that the PPP procedure is lengthy, needing to be streamlined and made more ‘user-friendly’.

On the positive side, it is expected that some key new toll-road links in the Trans-Java network will enter the construction phase next year, and work on the 126 km section between Cikampek and Palimanan will continue apace. Also, the missing link on the Jakarta Outer Ringroad—section W1, to the west of the city—will open in a few months’ time, relieving some of the considerable congestion in that area.

We should see movement in the renewable resource and energy space in 2014, with progress in development of solar and mini-hydro projects, and the country’s first pumped water storage scheme approaching finalisation. For the many water supply projects it needs carried out, the private sector is looking to engage local government directly under a form of B2B arrangement. This is expected to reduce the time involved in completion where central conditions have to be satisfied. These arrangements will also aid in supplying the investment needed for the portfolio of work to be carried out with Millennium Development Goals in mind, which is well beyond what government budgets are expected to allocate.”.

Also in 2014, the first new container terminal for the country’s main port, Tanjung Priok in North Jakarta, should approach the final construction phase, and construction for the next two terminals should get underway. In air transportation, progress is expected on a number of the many airport projects that need to be started as quickly as possible to accommodate double-digit percentage growth in domestic and international travel.

There is plenty to do.

Scott Younger is a Managing Director of Nusantara Infrastructure and a speaker at the upcoming Indonesia Summit 2014.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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