Sanur Port ready to operate before Bali G20 Summit: Minister

Minister of Transportation Budi Karya Sumadi directly reviewed the progress in the construction of Sanur Port that was planned to be ready before the G20 Summit in Bali.

“I visit Sanur Port to ensure that in September, this port is ready to operate ahead of the 2022 G20 Summit in Bali to go to Nusa Penida,” he noted in Denpasar, Bali, Wednesday.

Sumadi, who was assigned by President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) to oversee the port’s infrastructure project, ensured that before the G20 Summit in November, the port would be completed and ready to connect Denpasar with Nusa Penida, Nusa Lembongan, and Nusa Ceningan.

“Bali was one of the destinations that President Jokowi urged me to oversee in an effort to return it to being a major tourist destination. We also knew that (the intensity of) flights had increased significantly, and it showed that Bali was very attractive for domestic and foreign tourists,” Sumadi noted.

Hence, he urged the Bali governor to prepare the best human resources to offer optimal services and facilities to tourists visiting Bali.

Meanwhile, Governor of Bali Wayan Koster, who accompanied Minister Sumadi, expressed his gratitude to the central government for accepting the proposal for the construction of Sanur Port.

He said that so far, without the Sanur Port, the people and tourists in Bali encountered difficulties in crossing Badung Strait to get to Nusa Penida.

“I think this is an honor for us in Bali as well as a very comfortable change since, so far, people are facing difficulties in crossing Badung Strait to reach Nusa Penida. Now, it is good, and we just have to wait for September for it to be completed,” Koster told the media.

According to the Transportation Ministry’s monitoring at the port construction site, the construction process had, so far, exceeded the target of 89.717 percent, from the initial estimation of 83.159 percent until July 21, 2022.

Source: Antara News

TIIWG can help achieve sustainable industrialization: minister

The G20 Trade, Investment, and Industry Working Group (TIIWG) could help realize sustainable and inclusive industrialization, Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita has said.

“This alignment will also create a stronger, more resilient, sustainable, and inclusive economy by utilizing the potential of sustainable and inclusive industrialization,” he added at a high-level forum on trade, investment, and industry, according to a statement received here on Wednesday.

TIIWG is as an important forum for generating ideas for strategies to push economic recovery. This requires the alignment of trade, investment, and industrial policies toward the sustainable development goals.

The minister said that the crises arising from the COVID-19 pandemic over the past two years have put the spotlight on the industrial sector’s contribution to the world economy, namely as a provider of goods and employment, and as a driver of innovation.

“This is a new lesson for us to better overcome global challenges in the future. Of course, the challenges we face have been met with various digital technology innovations for the industry,” he added.

Not only the economic sector or the manufacturing industry, but other sectors, such as agriculture, energy, and health, have also seized the opportunities presented by digitalization to increase production efficiency and quality.

“We have seen that digitalization has increased the (quality) of the industrial sector, such as by minimizing the impact on the environment. This has also helped promote the process of achieving the SDGs by encouraging sustainable economic growth,” he pointed out.

He said the national manufacturing industry sector has put in efforts to implement digitalization and automation so that it is better prepared for addressing crises.

“Nevertheless, the transformation toward Industry 4.0 has often (been impeded by) several challenges, especially in terms of social inclusion and equal access to the use of advanced technology,” Kartasasmita added.

Thus, one of the focuses of this year’s TIIWG G20 has been an integrated approach to advancing Industry 4.0 and facilitating a systems approach for digital innovation and transformation.

“Overall, the goal is to establish a middle ground in accelerating inclusive and sustainable industrialization,” the minister said.

To meet that end, a comprehensive and coherent Industrial 4.0 ecosystem needs to be established through collaboration between stakeholders by building networks and cooperation.

“We want to urge G20 members to improve communication and collaboration for overcoming collective challenges and supporting inclusive and sustainable industrialization and promoting global economic recovery,” he said.

There have been varying viewpoints and degrees of support from G20 member countries to include the latest industry issues at the TIIWG forum, he added.

“However, we really hope for everyone’s support in pursuing industrial issues at the G20 forum to achieve our collective goal, namely recovering together, recovering stronger,” he remarked.

Source: Antara News

Need integrated development of electric vehicles ecosystem: minister

The development of electric vehicles must be undertaken in an integrated manner by involving government and private entities, and not separately, Transportation Minister Budi Karya Sumadi has said.

“In the development of electric vehicles, it must be done in an integrated way. Synergy between government or private companies can push the development of the integrated electric vehicles ecosystem in Indonesia,” the minister explained here, on Wednesday.

Efforts to develop electric vehicles are important to counter climate change, in accordance with Presidential Regulation Number 55 of 2019 on the program for battery-based electric vehicles development for road transportation, as well as other derivative regulations from relevant ministries or agencies, he added.

The government is aiming to cut CO2 emissions by 29–41 percent by 2030 and achieve net-zero emissions by 2060, he said.

The government has also formulated some policies, such as popularizing electric vehicles and developing the eco-friendly industry.

Sumadi responded positively to five branded agents (APM) who have helped the government in pursuing its goals by operating electric vehicles in Bali, either commercial rides or public transportation.

“I welcome the synergy and effort from companies that have popularized battery-based electric vehicles. I expect that collaboration through the development of the electrification mobility ecosystem would support the (efforts to create an) integrated electric vehicles ecosystem, coming 2030, and net-zero emissions in 2060,” he said.

He opined that the choice to develop the electric vehicle ecosystem in Bali, as one of the tourist destinations, is fitting since it would enable the message to be taken to the public promptly.

The synergy and efforts from the brands are expected to run consistently, he said, and urged them to showcase their electric vehicles during G20 events.

“I urge everyone to showcase their electric vehicle products, so people can appreciate and grow interested in using electric vehicles,” he said.

“I hope the electric vehicle ecosystem can become a must, which will bring greater good, (in order to gear) Indonesia (toward) sustainability,” Minister Sumadi added.

Source: Antara News

Digital development encourages villages self-reliance: BRIN

The development of digital-based smart villages can open up opportunities and encourage independence in governance in villages, National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) Head, Laksana Tri Handoko, stated.

“Even in remote areas, as long as there is connectivity, they will also get the same opportunities,” Handoko remarked at the webinar “Building Digital-Based Smart Villages” here on Wednesday.

According to Handoko, BRIN has the capacity to continue to improve research, development, evaluation, application, inventions, and innovations to contribute to scientific advancements not only in the form of policy recommendations but also its implementation.

He explained that scientific developments also encompassed the democratic development of regions being conducted through good governance, effectively executing programs, and encouraging the independence of villages through civilized innovation.

Digitalization will help close the gap in opportunities and access between cities and villages, he affirmed.

In supporting the digitalization of villages, BRIN promotes the community-based accurate data collection system at the village level.

“This data precision complements the existing data collection system while ensuring faster and more accurate data updates,” he explained.

On the same occasion, Research Professor in Politics and Government, R. Siti Zuhro, said the development of digital-based smart villages offers civil education, thereby increasing villagers’ participation and awareness.

Zuhro highlighted that it also improves the quality of public services through smart local governance, boosts the communities’ economic creativity based on science and technology, pushes the society to maintain a clean and healthy lifestyle and environment, as well as develops the values of local arts and cultural heritage sustainably.

Currently, there are 233 smart villages across the country, Head of the Information and Development Agency at the Villages, Disadvantaged Areas, and Transmigration Ministry, Ivanovich Agusta, noted.

“The main indicator of smart villages is when villages conduct data-based development and serve the community with (the use of) information technology,” Agusta stated.

Source: Antara News

Ministry to organize int’l wellness tourism conference, festival

The Tourism and Creative Economy Ministry will hold the 2022 International Wellness Tourism Conference and Festival (IWTCF) to support one of Indonesia’s 2022 G20 presidency agendas of strengthening the global health architecture.

The event themed “Sustainable Strategy for the Recovery and Growth of Global Tourism through Wellness Tourism,” to be held in Surakarta City, Central Java Province, on August 5-7, 2022, also aims to promote Indonesia as a wellness tourism destination.

During the weekly press briefing here on Wednesday, Tourism and Creative Economy Minister Sandiaga Uno drew attention to the rise of wellness tourism, considering that several people were keen to become healthier in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Meanwhile, Surakarta City is selected to host the event, as it followed the concept of “The City of Java Wellness Tourism,” he noted.

At the event, the ministry will showcase various wellness products divided into eight categories and made by local 24 micro, small, and medium enterprise (MSME) players, with the concept of a wellness village, as well as 30 non-small and medium enterprise (SME) industries.

The categories include healthy eating, nutrition and weight loss, physical activities, healthy eating, wellness tourism, traditional and complementary medicine, public health, prevention and personalized medicine, wellness real estate, as well as mental health.

Deputy for Tourism Products and Event Management of the ministry Rizki Handayani stated that the event will also offer wellness experience trips, with various travel package choices, including nine packages of one-day trip to Greater Surakarta, Yogyakarta, or Bali region.

There is also an option of a six-day overnight trip package to various destinations in Central Java Province and Bali Province.

Implementation of the trip would refer to the wellness travel guide titled “A Journey for Healthy Life” that had been compiled and published by the ministry in 2020.

“The activities (during the trip) will include healthy food workshops, yoga workshops, (and) wellness products’ exhibition. Later, there will (also) be wellness villages,” the deputy remarked.

Meanwhile, Director of Thematic Tourism at the ministry Alexander Reyaan noted that his side targets to have 300 participants attending the event in person as well as one thousand participants partaking in the event virtually.

Source: Antara News

Minister Hartarto lauds Toyota’s commitment on furthering investment

Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto responded positively to Toyota Motor Company’s initiative to further increase investment in the development of electric vehicles in Indonesia on account of the prospective demand in future.

The commitment was voiced by Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC), Shigeru Hayakawa, during a meeting with Hartarto and the government delegates in Tokyo, Japan.

“Demand for electric vehicles, either four-wheeled or two-wheeled, in Indonesia or the ASEAN region, will always increase in the future. Indonesia can become an industrial electric vehicle production base, to (have the product) marketed in the ASEAN region or even in Indonesia itself,” he noted in a statement on Wednesday.

At the meeting, Hayakawa stated that Toyota will invest more, to the tune of nearly Rp27.1 trillion (almost US$2 billion) in the next five years, as the company grew committed to supporting the electrification of vehicles.

Toyota has contributed to the reduction of emissions and fossil-based fuel imports by popularizing the use of electric vehicles in Indonesia. It also plans to add some other types of hybrid electric vehicles in the next four years.

President of Toyota Motor Corporation, Akio Toyoda, voiced his commitment to President Jokowi to invest in Indonesia during the Osaka Summit in 2019. Three years after that, Toyota had invested as much as Rp14 trillion (US$932 million).

Apart from investment, they also discussed about upskilling Indonesian engineers. Toyota pursued the goal by developing the xEV Center in May 2022 to hone the skills of local human resources with regard to electrification and prepare them in the digitalization era.

Toyota also worked with Pertamina and Inalum to develop the battery industry in Indonesia by improving and developing the skills of local technicians, local human resources, as well as the next generation of mobility and electrification.

The company also developed the xEV Center as a place to learn about electrification and to support the Indonesia Digital Industry Center 4.0 in a bid to hone the skills of domestic human resources to ready them to face the electrification and digitalization era.

The company also worked with national technicians to develop the Kijang Innova BEV concept to study about technology and conditions to prepare for a more practical implementation among the citizens.

Hartarto stated that the government will use Toyota’s electric vehicle in G20 November 2022 for the delegates.

At the meeting, the minister was accompanied by Industry Ministry Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita, Ambassador of Indonesia to Japan Heri Ahmadi, Secretary of the Coordinating Ministry of Economic Affairs, and Director General of International Security, Area, and Access at the Industry Ministry.

The representatives of Toyota Motor Corporation included Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, Shigeru Hayakawa; President Director of PT Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indonesia (TMMIN), Warih Andang Tjahjono; and TMC and TMMIN board of directors.

Source: Antara News

Gov’t supports efforts to improve monkeypox detection capabilities

The government will support efforts to boost the capacity of health and laboratory officers in detecting the monkeypox infection that has spread across countries in Asia, an official stated.

“Enhancement of detection capacity is essential to prevent the spread of monkeypox following infection cases reported in various countries,” Coordinating Ministry of Human Development and Cultural Affairs’ Deputy for Health Quality Enhancement and Development Coordination Agus Suprapto stated here, Wednesday.

The coordinating ministry’s deputy said intensification of training could enhance the health officers’ capabilities to detect monkeypox.

“This is particularly for officers at all entry points to Indonesia, in primary healthcare facilities, and health workers in the frontline to handle the disease,” he noted.

Suprapto also highlighted the pressing need to disseminate information on monkeypox prevention measures, considering that the World Health Organization declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

“Since the monkeypox disease has been declared an international concern, dissemination and education on the disease to residents must be intensified. Therefore, residents have sufficient knowledge about the monkeypox disease, the infection method, and prevention and handling measures,” the ministry’s official explained.

Meanwhile, Indonesian Epidemiologists Association’s (PAEI’s) Professional Development Department Head Masdalina Pane earlier called on residents to play an active role to prevent monkeypox infection.

“Residents must have an understanding of this disease, so they can play an active role in the collective efforts to prevent the disease,” Pane stated.

Pane, who concurrently serves as the National Research and Innovation Agency’s Health Research Centre researcher, noted that the monkeypox disease was caused by the Orthopoxvirus infection.

“(The disease has) an incubation period of five to 21 days, with varied symptoms among sufferers, yet it is similar to other infectious diseases. Common symptoms are fever, headache, muscle pain, swollen lymph nodes, and the appearance of rash on the skin,” the researcher stated.

Source: Antara News

Doctors must remain alert for monkeypox symptoms: IDI

The Indonesian Doctors Association (IDI) has asked all doctors to remain alert for the symptoms of monkeypox in patients, following the trend in global cases that has prompted an advisory for a potential monkeypox epidemic.

“Monkeypox is zoonotic, with the main transmission being through human contact with blood, bodily fluids, or lesions on the mucosa or skin of infected animals,” Adityo Susilo from the Indonesian Association of Internal Medicine Specialists (PAPDI) said in a statement on Wednesday.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared a state of emergency for monkeypox. Although it has not been detected in Indonesia, monkeypox cases have been identified in Singapore.

Monkeypox is a viral infectious disease that is zoonotic and rare. Since it was first identified, several cases of human infection have been reported sporadically in Central and West Africa, generally in locations close to tropical rainforest areas.

“This monkeypox belongs to the orthopoxvirus genus, such as the variola virus that causes smallpox, and was declared eradicated worldwide by the WHO in 1980,” Susilo said.

Based on WHO data, monkeypox was initially identified in 1970 in Zaire and has since been reported to have spread sporadically in ten countries in Central and West Africa. In 2017, Nigeria experienced the most extraordinary event, reporting an estimated 40 confirmed infections.

Since May 2022, monkeypox has become a global public health concern as it has been detected in non-endemic countries.

The WHO has received reports of monkeypox cases originating from non-endemic countries since May 13, and so far, the disease has spread to a total of 75 countries globally.

As of July 25, as many as 18,905 cases of monkeypox have been confirmed worldwide, with 17,852 cases detected in countries with no previous case history.

The United States has reported 3,846 cases of monkeypox. In ASEAN, Singapore has reported 9 confirmed cases and Thailand has reported 1 confirmed case.

In Africa, cases of monkeypox in humans have been associated with a history of contact with infected animals, such as monkeys, squirrels, mice, and other rodents. Eating infected animal meat that is not cooked thoroughly has also been identified as another method of transmission.

“As for human-to-human transmission, it is suspected that it can occur as a result of close contact with infected patients directly through exposure to infected respiratory secretions, direct contact with a patient’s skin lesions, or contact with objects that have been contaminated by the patient’s bodily fluids,” said Susilo.

Vertical transmission from mother to fetus through the placenta (congenital monkeypox infection) can also occur, he added.

The incubation period for monkeypox is about 5–21 days, and 6–16 days on average. After the incubation phase, a patient experiences clinical symptoms such as high fever with severe headache, lymphadenopathy, back pain, muscle aches, and prominent weakness.

One-three days after the fever appears, the patient finds spots on the skin, starting from the face and spreading throughout the body.

These spots are mainly found on the face, the palms of hands, and the soles of feet. Over time, the spots turn into maculopapular skin lesions, vesicles, and pustules, which, in ten days, turn into scabs.

Susilo, who is also the central executive of the Indonesian Association of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases, said that until now, there is no specific treatment for monkeypox.

However, vaccination against smallpox caused by the variola virus detected in 1980 could provide 85 percent effective protection against monkeypox.

With the discovery of the monkeypox cases in Singapore, people also need to remain alert to the possibility of the virus entering Indonesia, he said.

This is especially important for populations that are at risk of fatality due to monkeypox, such as children, pregnant women, the elderly, and people with low immunity (immunosuppression), he said.

“Reflecting on the COVID-19 pandemic that has hit, we must always be optimistic that by working together the global community will be able to move quickly to respond to this situation,” he added.

Susilo said that avoiding contact with suspected patients is key to the most effective prevention. This needs to be followed by surveillance and early detection of active cases through quarantine to prevent wider spread.

In the meantime, head of PB IDI’s Infectious Disease Control Study, Agus Dwi Susanto, said that building a good understanding of monkeypox and early alertness against extraordinary events are key prevention measures.

He also asked health workers, both doctors and nurses, who detect symptoms of monkeypox in patients to immediately follow up with a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test.

The monkeypox virus examination is meant to detect the DNA of the virus and then report it to the local Health Office for immediate surveillance and further action.

Source: Antara News