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Tangerang landfill fire is contained, adding fresh momentum to Indonesia's open dumping phase out

By Sirkularium Editorial Team, 9 min read

A waste worker sorting recyclable plastic bottles at an open dump site

A ten day fire that burned 15 hectares of the Jatiwaringin landfill in Tangerang Regency has been fully extinguished, with the emergency status lifted on 15 July 2026, sharpening national attention on ending open dumping and turning landfill methane into an economic opportunity.

At a glance
15 hectares
Area burned at the 33 hectare Jatiwaringin site, of a 33 hectare landfill
10 days
Time from ignition on 30 June to full containment on 9 to 10 July
334
Residents treated for acute respiratory infection during the fire
232
Residents evacuated at the peak of the emergency, per BNPB

What happened at Jatiwaringin

On 30 June 2026, a fire broke out on an open dumping section of the Jatiwaringin landfill in Mauk District, Tangerang Regency, Banten. It started on roughly two hectares and, fed by dry season heat and combustible waste, spread before firefighting crews brought it under control. By the time responders declared full containment on 9 to 10 July, the burned area had reached approximately 15 hectares of the site's 33 hectares, according to Antara News and CNA Indonesia.

Tangerang Regent Moch Maesyal Rasyid activated an emergency response status through a regent's decree that ran from 1 to 14 July, coordinating the Regional Disaster Management Agency (BPBD), the Environmental Health and Sanitation Agency (DLHK), and the National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB). Ahmad Ruslan of BPBD and Ujat Sudrajat, head of DLHK Tangerang, oversaw crews on the ground, while BNPB's Riswandi confirmed that national air support assets remained available if regional teams requested them.

As smoke spread over nearby settlements, residents in Tanjakan Mekar and Rajeg Mulya villages were moved out as a precaution. Reported evacuee counts rose over the course of the emergency, from 102 people five days into the fire, to 210 a day later, reaching a peak of 232 according to a BNPB update. Kompas.id and a statement to media from Ateng Sutisna, a member of House of Representatives Commission XII, both put the number of residents treated for acute respiratory infection at 334.

On 14 July, Regent Maesyal confirmed the fire was fully extinguished with no hotspots detected across the site, including the eastern and western sectors and the pile summits. He told reporters, in comments carried by CNN Indonesia, that the emergency status could be withdrawn from 15 July, on condition that mitigation measures continue. The regency government intends to keep watering and cooling operations running, build water reservoirs closer to the landfill, improve access roads for fire trucks, and deploy thermal drones to spot heat build up before it becomes a new fire.

Why landfill fires keep recurring in the dry season

Wahyu Purwanta, a senior researcher at Indonesia's National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN), explained to CNN Indonesia that a fire needs only three ingredients: fuel, oxygen, and an ignition source. At an open dumping landfill in dry season, the first two are already abundant. Dry waste itself is fuel, and organic material decomposing under a mound generates methane, a highly flammable gas. Oxygen circulates freely through an uncompacted, uncovered pile. The only variable open to intervention, Purwanta noted, is the ignition source, whether that is an open burn near the site, a discarded cigarette, or simple inattentive monitoring during the driest months of the year.

Wahyu Eka Setyawan, urban justice manager at the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi), made a related point after visiting the site: as long as methane keeps accumulating inside an open dumping system, a fire becomes less a matter of chance and more a matter of time. He urged fuller implementation of Law No. 18 of 2008 on waste management, with particular emphasis on handling waste upstream, closer to where it is generated, rather than relying on landfills as the default endpoint.

Rizal Irawan, KLH's Deputy for Environmental Law Enforcement, told reporters the fire most likely originated in a part of the site that had not yet been converted to controlled landfill practice, a distinction that matters because Jatiwaringin had already begun a transition: the Ministry of Environment ordered a temporary closure of the site in May 2025 over management concerns, and it reopened in December 2025 after operators committed to improvements. The June fire is a reminder that the transition from open dumping to controlled and sanitary landfilling has to be completed everywhere on a site, not partially, for the risk to fall away.

Why this matters for national policy

The Jatiwaringin fire has become a reference point in a debate that was already underway. Indonesia's government, now led on this file by Minister of Environment Moh Jumhur Hidayat following an April 2026 cabinet reshuffle, has set a national target to end open dumping practice at the country's final disposal sites, with regional governments given until 2026 to close or convert non compliant sites or face administrative and, in persistent cases, criminal consequences. Minister Jumhur visited the Jatiwaringin site on 5 July while the fire was still being brought under control.

Ateng Sutisna, the Commission XII lawmaker who oversees environmental affairs, described the fire as a clear signal that open dumping can no longer be tolerated, warning that under strong El Nino conditions, an uncovered landfill can behave like a stockpile waiting for an ignition point. His comments, alongside Walhi's and BRIN's, reflect a rare alignment across government, civil society, and the scientific community on the same conclusion: the fix is structural, not incidental, and it means finishing the shift to controlled landfill operations, methane capture, and upstream waste reduction, not simply extinguishing the next fire faster.

For Sirkularium's government and public sector audience, the useful frame is not that a fire happened, but that Indonesia's institutions responded to it with unusual coordination and speed. A regency government activated a formal emergency structure within a day of ignition, mobilized national disaster management support, fully contained a 15 hectare fire within ten days, and is now investing in permanent risk reduction rather than standing down once the flames were out. That is closer to the incident response maturity that circular economy financing partners, insurers, and development institutions look for when assessing a jurisdiction's readiness for investment in modern waste infrastructure.

What comes next

Tangerang Regency's continuing mitigation plan, cooling operations, new water reservoirs, improved fire truck access, and thermal drone monitoring, gives other regencies still operating open dumping sites a concrete template to adapt ahead of the remainder of the dry season. Nationally, the episode adds practical urgency to two threads of Indonesia's circular economy agenda that were already moving: accelerating the conversion of remaining open dumping sites to controlled or sanitary landfill standard, and treating landfill gas as a resource rather than a hazard, since captured methane can feed waste to energy generation instead of fueling the next fire.

Sirkularium's view

For government and public institutions managing solid waste infrastructure, Jatiwaringin illustrates both the risk of an unfinished transition and the value of a well drilled emergency response. The policy priority now is to close the remaining gap between sites where controlled landfill practice is partially in place and those where it is complete, since partial coverage appears to be exactly where risk concentrates. Financing methane capture and gas flaring systems at at risk sites, ahead of the next dry season rather than after the next fire, would convert a recurring hazard into both a safety improvement and a revenue stream, consistent with the seven circular economy business lines the Ministry of Environment, Ministry of Industry, and Bappenas have already identified as viable. Regencies that can show, as Tangerang has, a documented emergency structure, rapid interagency coordination, and a funded follow up mitigation plan will be better positioned to attract the financing and technical partnerships needed to complete that transition.

Evacuees as the Jatiwaringin fire spread

Values in residents evacuated

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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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