Willie Smits, Balikpapan Bay, Kalimantan Timur, Indonesia
Many of you may in the meantime have read from my Twitter or from news media that last Saturday the city of Balikpapan was watching a huge oil fire with an enormous black cloud rising above it. The fire happened right in front of the Pertamina oil refineries in the middle of the Bay of Balikpapan. 4 persons were confirmed dead and one is still missing. A huge oil spill covering several thousand hectares is still (April 4th, 2018) floating on the water. Initially the state oil enterprise Pertamina claimed it was fuel from a tanker that caused the blaze but after protests and a police investigation they admitted just hours ago (4 days later!) that it was their leaking 20-year-old pipeline underneath the Bay of Balikpapan that brings oil from the Paser Penajam Utara district to the refineries in Balikpapan that was the culprit.
All over the city of Balikpapan the strong nauseating smell was noticeable and according local newspaper reports hundreds of people reported breathing and other health issues that they related to the big fire and were treated in hospital. The Minister of Environment and Forestry sent an integrated team to try to bring the oil slick towards the Pertamina refinery where some 70 m3 of the spill was pumped up so far.
The Bay of Balikpapan has some of the best remaining mangrove forests in Kalimantan and we also have coral in the bay waters and a small population of Irrawaddy dolphins. Just a few weeks ago I spent half an hour watching a pod of four playfully swirl and swim near our boat on the exact spot where the huge fire happened. I was very sad to see the pictures of one dead Irrawaddy dolphin with severe burns which are most likely caused by the oil fire. Beneath a picture of the dolphin and how the oil spill is covering the lower leaves of the mangroves near Balikpapan. It is still unclear what the longer-term impact on the ecosystem will be.
Here are some pictures of our harbour, normally the scene of many children jumping in the water for a swim, which will not be possible for some time to come.
The picture on the left was after one day and the picture on the right is the oil in front of the Arsari harbor four days later. The smell is still everywhere and can even be detected 25 kilometres up the Bay of Balikpapan.
Here is a picture of oil slicks ten kilometres up the Bay of Balikpapan where endless streams of pontoons with more CO2 emitting fossil coal and impending global disaster are heading to electricity power plants to support this growing nation’s needs. Just a further ten kilometres up the bay, Arsari Enviro Industri is putting up a challenge to fossil fuels through their sustainable energy producing agroforestry based reforestation in combination with biochar stored in the soil to draw down CO2 from the atmosphere. We are also protecting the remaining good mangroves and wildlife there and restoring damaged mangrove forests. A bigger contrast with the fast expanding old fossil fuel based industries close to the city of Balikpapan is hardly imaginable. Hopefully this disaster will at least make some decision makers focus on the need for real change. Change that needs to follow the principles of nature. Nature does not know the concept of waste.
Willie Smits
Arsari base camp
Bay of Balikpapan
April 4th, 2018
Leave a Reply