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Indonesia sets a firm 2027 deadline to end open dumping at landfills

By Sirkularium Editorial Team, 7 min read

Local government officials inspecting an open dumping landfill site

Environment Minister Jumhur Hidayat tightened a phased 2027-2028 target into a single hard deadline, with 369 of the country's 485 landfills still needing to convert to controlled or sanitary systems.

At a glance
2027
National deadline to end open dumping
485
Landfills operating nationwide
30%
Landfills that had stopped open dumping by end of 2025
71%
Residents sorting waste at source in Denpasar and Badung

A hard deadline replaces a phased one

On 10 July 2026, Environment Minister Moh. Jumhur Hidayat told reporters that every regional government in Indonesia now has until 2027 to end open dumping at its landfills. The statement tightens a target the ministry itself had floated only four days earlier. On 6 July, the same minister described a phased approach, with half the country's non-compliant landfills expected to convert by 2027 and the rest allowed to follow in 2028. Within days, that split target became a single deadline covering every remaining site. The shift signals that the ministry expects to move faster than its own early-July timeline suggested, and it puts a firm date in front of regional heads who had, until now, more room to negotiate their own pace.

Indonesia operates 485 landfills nationwide, according to ministry figures cited in the announcement. About 30 percent, roughly 145 sites, had already stopped open dumping by the end of 2025, generally by shifting to controlled or sanitary methods. That leaves 369 landfills still relying on open dumping, the practice of depositing waste without compaction or a regular soil cover, as their primary method of disposal. Those are the sites the 2027 deadline now targets directly.

What the deadline actually requires

The minister has been careful, across several public statements this year, to distinguish between closing a landfill and ending open dumping at one. "We are not closing landfills across Indonesia, what exists is halting open dumping activities," Hidayat said in June, addressing concerns in Bali that the policy meant local dumps would simply shut their gates. The distinction matters for regional governments now planning their transition. Under the new rule, only two categories of landfill operation remain permitted from 2027: controlled landfills, where waste is compacted and covered with soil on a periodic cycle, typically every three to seven days, and sanitary landfills, which are compacted and covered daily and use impermeable liners, usually geomembranes, to prevent leachate from reaching soil and groundwater. Regional governments have received a formal circular from the ministry setting out these requirements, and several have already begun the conversion.

The technical distinction is not incidental. Open dumping without compaction or cover generates methane as organic waste decomposes in the open, and loose, uncompacted piles are more prone to landfill fires, a risk the ministry has linked explicitly to El Nino conditions this year. Converting to controlled or sanitary operation is therefore as much a fire and emissions intervention as a waste management one.

We are not closing landfills across Indonesia, what exists is halting open dumping activities.

The enforcement record behind the target

The ministry's own monitoring data gives a sense of how it intends to enforce the deadline. Of the landfills currently under direct ministry supervision, 388 have been monitored for open dumping practices. Of those, 273 have already received formal sanctions, 231 have been ordered to stop open dumping outright, and 22 have been ordered to cease operations entirely. That progression, from monitoring to sanction to a stop order to, in the most serious cases, closure, describes an enforcement pipeline already running well before the 2027 deadline takes effect. It suggests the ministry is treating 2027 less as a starting gun and more as a backstop for sites that have not responded to escalating pressure by then.

Regional governments that move early are likely to face a lighter version of this process. Those that do not risk moving through the same sequence the 388 monitored landfills are already in, with cessation of operations as the final step for sites that ignore stop orders.

Bali as an early proof point

The ministry has repeatedly pointed to Bali, and to the Denpasar and Badung districts specifically, as evidence that the transition is achievable on a realistic timeline. About 71 percent of residents in those two districts now sort waste at the source, before it ever reaches a collection point. That sorting rate is a precondition for controlled and sanitary landfill operation to work at scale, since only residual waste, roughly a quarter of the total stream once organic and recyclable material is separated out, should reach a landfill at all under the ministry's model. In Bali, organic waste is increasingly processed into fertilizer at facilities in Klungkung, while higher-calorie residual waste is converted into refuse-derived fuel, feeding into the waste-to-energy capacity the province is separately building out.

The minister has also tied the transition to the informal waste sector, calling for subsidies and clearer standards to protect informal workers as formal systems expand, framing the shift explicitly in terms of green jobs rather than displacement. That framing will matter for the 369 landfills still transitioning, where informal collection and sorting often already exists around the site and stands to be disrupted or formalized as controlled operation takes hold.

Sirkularium's view

The compressed timeline is a useful test of whether Indonesia's waste governance can move at the pace its own ministry is now setting. A jump from a phased 2027-2028 target to a single 2027 deadline, announced within the same month, is an aggressive acceleration for regional governments that must secure financing, land, and technical capacity for geomembrane liners and compaction equipment at 369 sites. Public institutions evaluating their own transition should treat the enforcement funnel already visible in the ministry's monitoring data, sanctions moving to stop orders moving to cessation, as the realistic consequence of missing the date, not a theoretical one.

The more constructive reading is that the ministry has paired the deadline with a working template. Bali's sorting rate and its organic-to-fertilizer and residual-to-fuel pathways did not happen by mandate alone. They required transfer station infrastructure, public participation campaigns, and a route for informal workers into the formal system. Regional governments with 369 landfills to convert would do well to treat that combination, rather than the deadline in isolation, as the model worth replicating. Institutions and financiers considering support for the transition should look for proposals that pair landfill conversion with source-sorting infrastructure and informal-sector inclusion, since the evidence so far suggests that combination, not conversion alone, is what moves the numbers.

Ministry enforcement actions on open dumping, 2025 to 2026

Values in landfills

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Sirkularium is a thought-leadership and advisory institution accelerating the circular transition across solid waste, water, and energy, working with government and public institutions.

In waste and pollution, Sirkularium helps design collection, sorting, and recovery systems, draft policy and roadmaps, and turn waste into a managed resource.

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