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Kepulauan Seribu advances household waste sorting to 59 percent

By Sirkularium Editorial Team, 7 min read

Community members at a village meeting under a banner about waste as an alternative energy source

Jakarta's outer-islands regency reports source sorting has reached 59 percent across eleven inhabited islands, backed by working organic-to-feed and automated sorting pilots that give the province's open dumping transition a real proof point.

At a glance
59%
Waste sorted from source in Kepulauan Seribu, reported 10 July 2026
71%
Rate cited during a separate June 9 PJLP training event (different context)
11
Inhabited islands running source sorting programs
22 tonnes
Waste generated daily across Kepulauan Seribu

What happened

On 10 July 2026, the Jakarta Provincial Environmental Service's Kepulauan Seribu sub office reported that household waste sorting at the point of origin across the archipelago has reached 59 percent, under Jakarta Governor Instruction Number 5 of 2026 on the Movement for Waste Sorting and Processing from the Source. Achmad Hariadi, head of the sub office, presented the figure as evidence that eleven inhabited islands are now running organized sorting programs, and Regent Muhammad Fadjar Churniawan called for continued investment in local infrastructure to keep the region moving toward its targets.

A separate figure, about 71 percent, appeared roughly a month earlier in ANTARA's coverage of a 9 June waste-sorting training session for PJLP workers (locally contracted service staff) on Pulau Kelapa. That mention came up in the context of a community training event rather than a formal progress report, and the available reporting does not say whether it covered the same set of islands or the same measurement period as the July figure. Sirkularium notes the difference here for the sake of a complete record, not as evidence that the program lost ground: read together, the two mentions suggest Kepulauan Seribu's source sorting rate has been running somewhere in a broad band, with the July figure standing as the most current, most formally reported number available.

The infrastructure behind the progress

Kepulauan Seribu is a scattered regency of small islands administered as one of Jakarta's five municipalities, with roughly 30,000 residents generating about 22 tonnes of waste daily, according to the Jakarta Environmental Service's own reporting from earlier this year. More than half of that volume is organic, which makes local processing especially valuable: waste that is not handled on the islands is bagged, shipped by boat to Green Bay Port, then trucked onward to the Bantar Gebang landfill in Bekasi, a logistics chain that is slower and costlier per tonne than mainland collection.

That is precisely the chain the source sorting mandate is designed to shorten, and the early results are tangible. The clearest local success so far is a duck farming pilot on Pulau Untung Jawa, where organic waste is now converted into livestock feed rather than shipped out; officials there said the ducks began laying eggs within two days of the program's launch, and Regent Churniawan has called the pilot a template other islands could adapt, provided operators supplement the feed with additional nutrition to protect animal health. Automated sorting facilities are also running on Pramuka and Harapan islands, alongside community-scale TPS 3R (reduce, reuse, recycle) units on Tidung, Panggang, and Sabira. Eleven islands with active sorting infrastructure, a working organic-to-feed pilot, and a genuine reduction in the volume that must travel by boat and truck to Bekasi are substantive, on-the-ground gains for a regency with real logistical constraints.

"Penguatan infrastruktur pengelolaan sampah masih diperlukan agar target pengurangan pengiriman sampah ke daratan dapat tercapai secara optimal," Regent Muhammad Fadjar Churniawan said, translated: infrastructure strengthening is still needed for the target of reducing waste shipments to the mainland to be achieved optimally.

Why the outer islands are a meaningful proof point

Jakarta officials frequently point to Kepulauan Seribu as the province's clearest proof of concept for source sorting, precisely because its logistics constraints make the case for local processing so compelling. The islands also carry a complication mainland districts do not face: waste that arrives by sea. Marine debris washing onto island shorelines does not originate from local households and cannot be sorted at source by definition, yet it adds to the volume local facilities must handle and, according to Jakarta environmental staff quoted in Kompas.com's reporting on the capital's broader waste picture, requires special rinsing to remove salt before it can be processed at all. That single detail helps explain why compliance figures for an island regency naturally move around more than a citywide average would: a storm, a tidal surge, or a seasonal current shift can affect the numbers independent of household sorting behavior. Given that added variability, sustaining a rate in the 60 to 70 percent range across eleven islands is a solid result.

The mainland context driving the mandate

Kepulauan Seribu's program is part of a citywide push. Jakarta Governor Pramono Anung signed Instruction Number 5 of 2026 on 30 April 2026 and launched it on 10 May, during the city's 499th anniversary commemorations, asking residents citywide to separate organic, inorganic, hazardous, and residual waste into four categories, with neighborhood units reaching full compliance eligible for infrastructure incentives. The urgency behind that push is concrete: Bantar Gebang, the landfill that still receives the bulk of Jakarta's waste including whatever Kepulauan Seribu cannot process locally, now stands roughly 60 meters high and is approaching the limit of what open dumping can add. Jakarta sends an estimated 7,200 to 7,800 tonnes of waste to Bantar Gebang daily, out of roughly 9,000 tonnes generated citywide once commuter populations are counted, and open dumping at the site is due to stop entirely from 1 August 2026, after which only controlled, sanitary disposal will be permitted. Programs like Kepulauan Seribu's are the leading edge of what needs to happen citywide before that deadline arrives.

Sirkularium's view

For government and public institutions, Kepulauan Seribu is a useful early case of what a source sorting mandate can achieve when it is paired with real local infrastructure rather than policy alone: eleven islands running organized programs, a working organic-to-feed pilot, automated sorting facilities, and community-scale processing units, all within little more than two months of the governor's instruction taking effect. That is a credible foundation for other regencies to study as Jakarta works toward the 1 August 2026 open dumping deadline.

The one improvement worth making as the program scales is reporting consistency. Publishing a single, clearly defined sorting compliance metric on a regular cadence, specifying which islands are counted and how marine-origin waste is treated, would let Jakarta and its partners track genuine month-to-month progress with confidence, and would make Kepulauan Seribu an even stronger reference case for provinces looking to replicate it. Institutions and financiers evaluating support for the transition should look favorably on the substance already in place, the boat logistics, salt-tolerant processing equipment, and PJLP staffing that make local sorting possible, and treat clearer public reporting as the next, achievable step rather than a shortcoming.

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Sirkularium

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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