Minister Effendy presses for prompt disbursement of social aid

The Coordinating Ministry for Human Development and Culture has encouraged state-owned post service company PT Pos Indonesia and the regional government to expedite the distribution of social assistance for communities affected by COVID-19.

“The disbursal of social assistance is still in progress due to the enforcement of Level 4 community activity restrictions. The distribution is conducted at the post or the sub-district offices,” Coordinating Minister for Human Development and Culture Muhadjir Effendy stated here on Monday.

Effendy urged the company to deliver aid comprising social cash and rice assistance directly to the recipients’ homes to avoid crowds. Hence, PT Pos Indonesia will collaborate with the local governments, National Police, and Indonesian National Defense Forces to expedite the distribution process.

Moreover, the minister stated that the government was handing out assistance in the form of the Family Hope Program, Non-Cash Food Assistance, as well as Village Fund Direct Assistance. The minister also reminded the local government to review the beneficiaries’ data. If they found any unregistered people in need, then the regional officers can register their names in the Integrated Social Welfare Data to enable them to receive the social assistance.

“If assistance from the Social Affairs Ministry and Village Fund is still inadequate, then the district and city heads are urged to provide social assistance by refocusing their regional budgets,” he stated.

According to Effendy, it was not permitted to cut the nominal of social assistance distributed to residents.

“Everything has to be handed out to the beneficiaries. Do not derive any personal benefits from this difficult situation,” he stressed.

Source: Antara News

Creative economy ministry holds Appreciation of Indonesian Creation

The Ministry of Tourism and Creative Economy will conduct the 2021 Appreciation of Indonesian Creations (AKI) Program for creative economy actors to continue to improve their products.

“The program will be immensely beneficial to the participants, as they will be guided by the ‘Super Mentors,’ who are competent in their respective fields. They will be trained to promote their products, increase their sales, and expand their business network,” Tourism and Creative Economy Minister Sandiaga Salahuddin Uno noted in his statement here on Monday.

Registration for the program is accessible through www.apresiasikreasiindonesia.com until August 13, 2021.

Uno noted that the program targets eight creative economy sectors – culinary, craft, fashion, music, film, animation, apps, and games.

Apart from Uno, the “Super Mentor” team comprises culinary YouTuber and entrepreneur Magdalena, founder of Warunk Upnormal Rex Marindo, founder of Kebab Baba Rafi Nilam Sari, founder of the Men’s Republic Yasa Singgih, actress Happy Salma, musician Ridho from the “SLANK” band, graphic designer Adib Hidayat, and co-creator of animation “Riko the Series” Yuda Wirafianto.

The 2021 Appreciation of Indonesian Creations is a creative economy development program through capacity building programs and exhibitions held in 16 regions in Indonesia. The event will be held in Bogor, Bandung, Semarang, Surakarta, Banyumas, Pekalongan, Banyuwangi, Surabaya, Malang, Denpasar, Lombok, Medan, Palembang, Bandar Lampung, Makassar and Balikpapan.

After being registered, each participant’s products will be evaluated. The selected ones will be incorporated in the program in the 16 regions. Meanwhile, each region’s best products will be showcased at the exhibition in Jakarta.

Source: Antara News

BRIN to aid ‘beyond ordinary’ development in technology: ministry

Minister of Agrarian and Spatial Planning, Sofyan A Djalil, has said he hopes the National Agency for Research and Innovation (BRIN) can help Indonesia achieve “beyond ordinary” development in technology.

“I hope that through BRIN, the national technology development program will be much faster developed,” Djalil, who is also head of the National Land Agency, added.

He made the remarks at the commemoration of the 26th National Technology Awakening Day (Hakteknas), themed ‘Integration of Research for Innovative Indonesia: Digital Green Blue Economy’, here on Tuesday.

President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) also attended the Hakteknas commemoration.

During the event, Djalil lauded the commemoration, the establishment of BRIN, and the integration of national research and innovation programs with BRIN.

Meanwhile, Religious Affairs Minister Yaqut Cholil Qoumas said this year’s Hakteknas theme is very relevant to current conditions.

He also said he hoped that the integration of the research and development units of ministries and institutions with BRIN will increase the relevance of research in Indonesia as an innovative country.

“One of the public criticisms of the Indonesian research sector is related to the relevance of the research’s theme and result. The criticism contains a new motivation and spirit of research that is more integrated and supported by innovation,” he explained.

At the same event, National Development Planning Minister, Suharso Monoarfa said the National Technology Awakening Day also marked the establishment of BRIN.

He said he hoped that the presence of BRIN would further spur the mastery of technology and innovation for the country’s benefit.

BRIN itself has been necessitated to boost Indonesia’s economic structure to enable it to clock average growth of at least 5 percent until 2025 and 6 percent after 2025, senior researcher at the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), Siti Zuhro, said earlier.

On Tuesday, head of BRIN, Laksana Tri Handoko, said that the agency will create a talent pool for the research and technology field across Indonesia and hire people from the talent pool as civil servants (ASN).

A strong ecosystem of research, innovation, and solid collaboration is necessary to optimize all the potential that Indonesia has to become a developed country, he added.

Source: Antara News

Expect Indonesia to achieve technological sovereignty: Widodo

Jakarta (ANTARA) – President Joko Widodo on Tuesday expressed the hope that the National Technology Awakening Day (Hakteknas) would serve as a reminder for the nation to achieve technological sovereignty.

“It is a momentum to expedite our technological sovereignty,” he said at the commemoration of the 26th Hakteknas, themed ‘Research Integration for Innovative Indonesia: Digital, Green, Blue Economy’.

“We have thousands of researchers and innovators as well as thousands of world-class research diaspora. We have to consolidate them,” he stressed at an online press conference, which was streamed on the YouTube channel of the National Agency for Research and Innovation (BRIN).

He then urged BRIN to make immediate efforts to integrate the strength of national research and innovation in terms of human resources, infrastructure, programs, and budgets.

BRIN should serve as the center of Indonesia’s technological advancement by coordinating the resources of government and private institutions, technology start-ups, and other related stakeholders, he added. The President also encouraged the acquisition of foreign advanced technologies so they can be produced domestically.

“I believe that Indonesia’s large market and abundant natural resources can give us advantages in the negotiation process. BRIN should get the acquisitions at affordable prices,” he said.

“Although we are currently focusing on the handling of COVID-19, we still have to carry out structural reforms for Indonesia’s progress in future,” he added

Furthermore, Widodo emphasized the importance of technology for domestic industries to increase added value of resources and create jobs.

“We have great opportunity in developing industries thoroughly — from upstream to downstream industries — for example, nickel mining. We have developed mining industries. Now, we should also develop lithium battery as well as electric car industries,” he said.

Relevant technology is also key for improving domestic micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), he added.

Source: Antara News

Helping raise digital financial literacy, inclusion in villages: OJK

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The Financial Services Authority (OJK) is supporting efforts to increase digital financial literacy and inclusion in villages, OJK’s deputy director of financial inclusion development, Rose Dian Sundari, has said.

It is hoped that OJK’s efforts would accelerate the digitalization of both local and national micro, small, and medium (MSMEs) enterprises amid the COVID-19 pandemic, she added.

During an online seminar entitled ‘Digital SME Confidence Report’, accessed from here on Tuesday, Sundari said the pandemic has affected OJK’s efforts to increase inclusion, but the agency will continue to encourage MSMEs to use digital products.

Indonesian people have started to become aware and knowledgeable regarding the use of digital financial products and services, she noted. However, there is still a gap between urban and rural populations despite the overall rise in the rate of financial literacy and inclusion, she added.

“One of the challenges is that Indonesia has a variety of regional conditions in terms of geography and demographics,” Sundari explained.

The OJK has made a number of regulations and programs to accelerate efforts to achieve digital financial literacy and equitable inclusion in villages, she said.

One of them is Presidential Regulation No. 114 of 2020 regarding Financial Inclusivity National Strategy, which covers the financial education program, consumer protection, as well as the Regional Financial Access Acceleration Team (TPAKD) program, she added.

The TPAKD is a coordination forum between institutions and stakeholders to boost the acceleration of financial access in regional areas to support the growth of the regional economy and help make residents prosper, Sundari said.

“We hope that digital literacy for MSMEs will increase, especially since there is TPAKD in regional areas, where there are only a small number of MSMEs who have been touched by digital transaction activities,” she remarked.

The programs are supported by regional governments, so financial literacy and inclusion should increase at a faster pace, she added.

Source: Antara News

Expect BRIN to improve Indonesia’s research competence: Effendy

Coordinating Minister for Human Development and Culture, Muhadjir Effendy, has said he expects the National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) to improve Indonesia’s research competence.

“In commemorating the 26th National Technology Awakening Day with the theme ‘Research Integration for Innovative Indonesia’, we hope that BRIN can continue to increase support and competence for research carried out by the nation’s generation, so that it continues to produce proud innovations and inventions,” said the minister at the commemoration of the 26th National Technology Day here on Tuesday.

By strengthening innovation and invention, the common goal of making Indonesia a more advanced country by 2045 will be achieved, he added.

“Science and technology is one of the means to make our nation more advanced as well as to raise the dignity and independence of our nation,” he remarked.

At the same event, Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, Airlangga Hartarto, said the National Technology Day coincided with the establishment of BRIN as an institution for integrated research, development, study and application of science and technology.

“Hopefully, the integration of research and development units from various ministries or institutions into BRIN will increase research capacity and competence in Indonesia and create an open, inclusive, and collaborative research ecosystem for all parties, according to global standards,” he added.

He said he hoped the integration of the research unit would also create conditions conducive to the digital economy and green economy.

Source: Antara News

Local Fruit Festival to revive fruit demand, economy

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The Local Fruit Festival (GBN) 2021 event is aimed at reviving demand for local fruits to support the growth of the national economy, Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto said.

At the opening of GBN 2021 here on Monday, the minister said that the event would help make the demand for the nation’s fruit thrive not only domestically, but also internationally.

He also expressed the hope that the event would serve as a marketing platform and raise the public’s awareness on eating local fruits.

Farming is the second largest sector after the processing industry in Indonesia and has shown consistent growth of 0.38 percent in 2020 as well as in the second quarter of 2021, Hartarto said.

The demand for fruits has also increased amid the COVID-19 pandemic, both domestically and internationally, due to their immunity-boosting benefit, he noted.

“This shows the sector’s resiliency, how its presence is needed in every condition, and how it continues to provide a positive contribution to the economy’s growth,” the minister remarked.

Horticulture is a sub-sector that has the potential to grow, he noted. The government has continued to push horticultural exports, while also resolving regulations that stalled it.

Indonesia’s horticultural exports touched 645.8 thousand tons in 2020, a 37.75-percent increase compared to 2019, Hartarto disclosed.

The increase was dominated by fruit exports, which reached 389.9 thousand tons, a 30.31-percent increase compared to 2019, he added.

Indonesia’s five primary fruit export destinations are China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan, he noted.

Source: Antara News

Benefits of seaweed cultivation for Indonesian economy

Jakarta (ANTARA) – American musician Davendra Banhart once said in an interview that it would be nice to be a seaweed since all it does is float in the water.

Seaweed, much like the grass on the ground, is often underestimated by people. This is despite the fact that the commodity has a variety of uses in their daily lives.

Indonesia is blessed with abundant seaweed reserves. The seaweed habitat in Indonesia is known to have reached 1.2 million hectares, making it the largest in the world.

In fact, Indonesia’s seaweed reserves are estimated to account for 8.6 percent of the total biota in the oceans.

Seaweed can not only be used as a food, it can also be used as a raw material in the cosmetics industry, such as for making gels. It can even be put to medicinal use by the pharmaceutical industry.

According to the Director General of Marine and Fishery Product Competitiveness at the Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry Artati Widiarti, seaweed innovation can be used to tackle several global issues such as plastic waste and climate change, which can be an opportunity for entrepreneurs in the marine sector.

For instance, seaweed can be processed into bioplastic, which can be used to replace the plastic packages presently in use, she said.

Research has shown that the use of asparagopsis taxiformis seaweed in the feed of ruminants, such as cows, can reduce methane gas emissions, she noted.

Widiarti said that she has, on several occasions, urged the public and entrepreneurs in the marine and fishery sector to be more invested in exploring the potential of seaweed. Indonesia is rich in macro-algae, with 89 familia, 268 genus, and 911 species recorded in its oceans, based on data from the Institute of Sciences’ Oceanography Research Center, she pointed out.

Red algae (Rhodophyta) is among the seaweeds that grow in the largest profusion in Indonesia’s oceans, with 265 species recorded so far, followed by green algae (Cholorophyta) with 201 species, and brown algae (Ochrophyta) with 146 species.

Such a variety of seaweeds is a blessing that must be taken advantage of to support the nation’s economy, provide jobs, raise foreign exchange, as well as provide food and nutrition, Widiarti said.

To this end, the ministry’s Cultivation Director General Tb Haeru Rahayu has stated that his agency is committed to raising the production of seaweed commodity since it has a broad market, both domestic and international, to boost the economy.

Due to this broad market, seaweed can be the nation’s primary commodity for cultivation, he said.

Especially since Indonesia is the second largest seaweed producer next to China, with exports reaching 195.574 ton in 2020, valued at US$279.58 million.

The ministry has improved the performance of cultivated seaweed seed through a variety of innovations to create quality seeds. It has also managed to develop seed using plant tissue isolation method and will continue to improvise for other species such as the saccule strain, he said.

In addition, it has also developed seaweed cultivation areas by optimizing promising land located in Indonesia’s eastern regions, such as East Nusa Tenggara, he added.

In the seaweed cultivation areas, seaweed villages will be built using eco-friendly technology in order to sustain and raise the prosperity of citizens. By utilizing and emphasizing synergy between innovation and industry, KKP believes that Indonesia can become a main player in the world seaweed industry.

Challenges

Despite the promising potential, there are a number of challenges to cultivating seaweed.

For instance, processing seaweed for products, such as food, cosmetics, as well as spices, can produce a large amount of waste, the ministry’s head of research and human resources Sjarief Widjaja said.

Processing of gracilaria and cottonii seaweed produces 8,174,150 cubic meters of liquid waste and 62,506 tons of solid waste per year.

This is why, in the effort to process seaweed, we should not create new problems, both for the industry and the environment, Widjaja cautioned.

The large amount of waste generated while processing seaweed can be recycled for other uses. For instance, liquid waste can be used as liquid fertilizer, while solid waste can be used as a raw material in ceramics, particle boards, fertilizers, and even light bricks.

According to executive director of Maritime Research Center for Humanity, Abdul Halim, the policy for implementing maritime sector innovations, such as producing bioplastic from seaweed, needs to be accompanied by other technical training measures to allow residents to cultivate it on a large scale.

The accompanying measures must be undertaken with the right approach that is also sustainable.

By focusing the program on increasing public’s technical knowledge and developing citizens’ prosperity, the program will be more accurate and beneficial in the future.

Due to the variety of benefits that seaweed provides, let us hope that it could not just assist in the nation’s economic recovery, but also contribute significantly to the global economy.

Source: Antara News