Stop Food Waste Day: Seberapa Darurat Masalah Sampah Makanan di Indonesia?
[Indonesia] Hari Stop Food Waste Day menyoroti krisis pemborosan makanan di Indonesia yang mencapai jutaan ton setiap tahunnya, terutama dari rumah tangga dan restoran. Perlu kesadaran kolektif dan tindakan nyata dari pemerintah, bisnis, dan masyarakat untuk mengurangi limbah makanan dan mencegah kelaparan. Sumber: National Geographic Indonesia
MenLH Sebut Indonesia Hanya Mampu Kelola 26% Sampah
[Indonesia] Menteri Lingkungan Hidup mengungkapkan bahwa Indonesia saat ini hanya mampu mengelola 26% dari total sampah yang dihasilkan, menunjukkan keterbatasan kapasitas sistem pengelolaan sampah nasional. Pernyataan ini menekankan urgensi peningkatan infrastruktur dan sistem pengelolaan sampah untuk menghadapi krisis sampah yang semakin mengkhawatirkan. Sumber: Bloomberg Technoz
Negara dengan Pengelolaan Sampah Terbaik di Dunia, Indonesia Peringkat Berapa?
[Indonesia] Indonesia menempati peringkat 54 dari 180 negara dalam pengelolaan sampah menurut indeks global terbaru, tertinggal jauh dari negara-negara maju seperti Denmark, Jerman, dan Austria yang menempati posisi teratas. Rendahnya peringkat Indonesia menunjukkan masih perlu peningkatan signifikan dalam sistem pengelolaan sampah dan kesadaran masyarakat terhadap penanganan limbah yang berkelanjutan. Sumber: GoodStats
Pembangunan PSEL jadi Langkah Maju Indonesia Selesaikan Permasalahan Sampah
[Indonesia] Pembangunan Pusat Saniter Energi Limbah (PSEL) merupakan inisiatif strategis Indonesia untuk mengatasi krisis sampah yang terus meningkat melalui teknologi pengolahan modern. Langkah ini diharapkan dapat mengurangi volume sampah di tempat pembuangan akhir sekaligus menghasilkan energi terbarukan dari limbah domestik. Sumber: Liputan6.com
[HOAKS] Video Kapal Membuang Sampah di Laut Indonesia
[Indonesia] Video yang beredar di media sosial menunjukkan kapal membuang sampah ke laut Indonesia ternyata adalah konten hoaks yang menyebar tanpa verifikasi yang jelas. Berdasarkan pengecekan fakta, video tersebut tidak terbukti terjadi di perairan Indonesia dan perlu diwaspadai agar masyarakat tidak menyebarkan informasi yang belum terverifikasi. Sumber: Dinas Komunikasi, Informatika, Statistik dan Persandian Kabupaten Purworejo
KLH Targetkan Open Dumping Sampah Dihentikan Total di Indonesia pada Agustus 2026
[Indonesia] Kementerian Lingkungan Hidup (KLH) telah menetapkan target ambisius untuk menghentikan praktik open dumping sampah di seluruh Indonesia pada Agustus 2026. Upaya ini merupakan bagian dari komitmen pemerintah untuk meningkatkan pengelolaan sampah dan melindungi lingkungan dari pencemaran yang ditimbulkan oleh pembuangan sampah sembarangan. Sumber: Bogor-Kita.com
PSEL, Langkah Maju Indonesia Menyelesaikan Permasalahan Sampah
[Indonesia] Program Sistem Ekonomi Lingkaran (PSEL) merupakan inisiatif terbaru Indonesia untuk mengatasi krisis sampah dengan menerapkan prinsip ekonomi sirkular yang berkelanjutan. Melalui program ini, diharapkan sampah dapat dikelola lebih efisien dan diubah menjadi sumber daya berharga bagi ekonomi nasional. Sumber: Radar Sorong
Dua model pengolahan sampah dorong transisi energi Indonesia
[Indonesia] Penerapan dua model pengolahan sampah terbukti mampu menghasilkan energi terbarukan yang dapat mendukung transisi energi nasional Indonesia. Strategi ini tidak hanya mengatasi masalah sampah, tetapi juga berkontribusi dalam mengurangi ketergantungan terhadap energi fosil dan mencapai target net-zero emission. Sumber: ANTARA News
Collection and Recycling Rate Index of Plastic Waste in Indonesia

[ENG] Collection and Recycling Rate Index of Plastic Waste in Indonesia Indonesia’s plastic consumption continues to grow rapidly, especially in the packaging and food-and-beverage sectors. While plastic offers practical benefits, the country faces serious pollution challenges due to weak waste management systems—leading to widespread environmental leakage and even landfill fires. These issues underscore the urgent need for better plastic waste recovery and recycling. To support this effort, Sustainable Waste Indonesia (SWI), in collaboration with Indonesia Plastic Recycler (IPR), conducted a national study from July to December 2024. The study assesses the collection and recycling rates of various plastic types and maps the value chain of recyclable plastic waste. Through interviews with over 700 stakeholders and expert-validated data, it provides a comprehensive snapshot of Indonesia’s current recycling landscape, offering insights to improve future plastic waste management strategies. Read the full study here: Full Report RRI Executive Summary RRI [IND] Indeks Tingkat Pengumpulan dan Daur Ulang Sampah Plastik di Indonesia Konsumsi plastik di Indonesia terus meningkat, terutama di sektor kemasan serta makanan dan minuman. Meski plastik menawarkan berbagai manfaat praktis, lemahnya sistem pelayanan pengelolaan sampah menyebabkan pencemaran lingkungan yang meluas—termasuk kebocoran sampah ke sungai, laut, hingga kebakaran sampah di TPA. Kondisi ini menegaskan perlunya perbaikan sistem pemulihan dan daur ulang sampah plastik di Indonesia. Untuk mendukung upaya tersebut, Sustainable Waste Indonesia (SWI) bersama Indonesia Plastic Recycler (IPR) melakukan studi nasional pada Juli–Desember 2024. Studi ini mengukur tingkat pengumpulan dan daur ulang berbagai jenis plastik, sekaligus memetakan rantai nilai sampah plastik yang dapat didaur ulang. Melalui wawancara dengan lebih dari 700 pelaku industri serta data yang divalidasi oleh para ahli, studi ini menyajikan gambaran menyeluruh tentang kondisi daur ulang plastik di Indonesia saat ini, sekaligus memberikan rekomendasi untuk perbaikan ke depan. Full Report RRI Executive Summary RRI
Plastics post-pandemic: Tragedy or opportunity?
Indonesia is one of the countries moving forward to the circular economy platform. Plastic circularity, which involves both the formal and informal economies in its value chain, has been included as part of its agenda. The informal sector, specifically, plays a significant role in running the collection and processing of the recycling supply chain today, thus acting as the fundamental livelihood for around 2 million people in Indonesia. It forms an ecosystem that, despite being called informal, actually performs a pattern to organize quantity and quality of plastic within its wide network. Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, practitioners and activists of the circular economy on plastics already faced challenges in mainstreaming this platform. The idea to reduce pollution while improving the economy and competitiveness of the industry still needs pre-conditions to accelerate its implementation. The pre-conditions mainly include enabling national regulation that concretely incentivizes the use and production of products with recycled content, and the actualization of a business model that enables synergy between the formal waste management system and the informalities of the recycling ecosystem. Our research has shown that Indonesia currently has a 7 percent recycling rate of plastic, although specific types such as PET bottles are recycled at a rate of nearly 70 percent. With this baseline in mind, we need to be cautious because the majority of plastic still needs to be contained and re-processed to avoid pollution and benefit the economy. The challenges have become wider since COVID-19 began to spread around the world. The oil price decrease has resulted in a lower price of virgin plastics compare to recycled plastics, causing a domino effect for the recycling industry. The market demand became lower, the supply chain became slower, factories reduced (some even stopped) purchasing recycling materials, and the informal sector failed to sell its sorted plastics, resulting in unpaid waste pickers and a stock pile-up of post-consumer plastic materials. In the formal and semi-formal sectors, waste facilities and waste banks in the communities are striving to maintain their operations, due to declining income from recyclable sales. This is worsened in cities where local government subsidies are shifted to COVID-19 relief mitigation actions. As a consequence, unsafe disposal and burning of waste have become inevitable in some waste facilities. The uncertainty surrounding economic recovery after COVID-19 is undeniably shattering the recycling industry as one of the circular economy pillars. On the other side, unemployment, which will skyrocket due to economic depression, will likely increase the number of informal workers who turn to the easiest job to take: waste picking. If all of us realize this too late and fail to take immediate measures in handling these impacts to the recycling ecosystem, Indonesia could be moving further backward in meeting the target of reducing 70 percent of ocean plastic pollution by 2025. The government, industry and society have to align together to mitigate and adapt during and after COVID-19 to enable the circular economy to stay on track, and even to hold more strategic positions. There are two sides of the coin for this: the recycling economy as the safety net for job employment and small/micro-entrepreneurs empowerment – the economy side; and recycling as a measure to divert the burden of waste at landfills, the conditions of which are at a critical stage in Indonesia – the environment side. Nationwide awareness about this urgency needs to be raised. The impacts would otherwise threaten our daily lives if we fail or are late to realize. Piles of trash in our neighborhoods would very much worsen the situation in this pandemic. The questions of what should we do to revive the whole ecosystem remain challenging. Nevertheless, we try to point out what we consider doable programs to address this. The first one is economic measures. Economic stimulus is needed for business actors, especially SMEs along the value chain, through financial support or guarantees, opening new markets, tax incentives or supporting infrastructure. A regulatory framework that incentivizes products with recycle content needs to be prioritized, promoting recycling-based products that should be supported, e.g. through procurement of non-food contact related products in government institutions or state-owned enterprises. It is also important that instruments of standards and verifications, especially for food-grade packaging that use recycled materials, are implemented soon. Incentives should be prioritized for post-consumer recycling – of which waste collecting and processing takes place in Indonesia – by Indonesian recyclers, rather than imported scrap or recyclate/resin produced by other countries. This is crucial to make sure that the circular economy is the solution that will give the most benefits to our nation. The second one is collaborative measures. The development of a business model to synergize formal and informal systems in the collection and processing of plastic waste needs concrete realization. Perhaps on a pilot scale first, then scale up. Waste management investment via private engagement should also be explored more and implemented, both in a medium and large-scale capacity. *** Director of Sustainable Waste Indonesia