This isn’t being shown as much in the media, but Australia’s neighbor, Indonesia is dealing with a crisis of their own. There is severe flooding in Jakarta that’s been happening since New Year’s Eve and is one of the most powerful monsoons seen in over a decade.
66 people are confirmed dead, with more missing. Over 173,000 people have been displaced in Jakarta and nearby Bekasi City — and there’s more rain on the way.
The bad weather has caused blackouts and mudslides, hindering rescue efforts. Some roads are totally cut off due to the flooding.
The Red Cross has started to spray the city with a disinfectant meant to stop the spread of waterborne diseases. Warming temperatures and higher levels of rainfall cause the increase in these diseases — which is worrisome with our current climate crisis. (cnn)
Jakarta is also the fastest-sinking city in the world, which is largely caused by groundwater extraction in commercial and residential areas. It’s estimated that Jakarta is currently sinking at a rate of 25 centimeters per year, which can make flooding worse.
It’s sinking even faster than climate change is causing the sea to rise — so surreally fast that rivers sometimes flow upstream, ordinary rains regularly swamp neighborhoods and buildings slowly disappear underground, swallowed by the earth. (ny times)
The Indonesian government is planning on moving the country's capital to the island of Borneo to mitigate some of the problems Jakarta is expected to encounter due to climate change. That project is expected to take a decade and cost about $34 billion. (cnn)
How can you help?
I had a harder time finding places to donate for the Jakarta floods, but I’ve shared a few links for places to donate below:
Singapore Red Cross: Give Towards Jakarta Floods
Emergency Response: The Flooding Across Jakarta
Help Flood Victims Together with Kitabisa
Repeating this again because it’s important. In cases like this where the media isn’t highlighting what’s going on, it’s so important to SPREAD AWARENESS. One of the greatest challenges with climate change is its intangibility. The scope is just too large to grasp, and many of the most noticeable impacts are still too far removed from our daily lives. For some, climate change becomes either overwhelmingly challenging or abstract enough that it is easy to ignore. (Land Trust Alliance) If we communicate openly about what’s going on, it becomes easier to grasp and feel for something that you might not be seeing right in front of your face. This sparks change on so many different levels.
There have also been studies finding that people tend to believe that victims in racial groups different than their own suffer fewer “uniquely human” emotions like anguish, mourning, and remorse than victims of their own race. Vox wrote an article about this after Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and it’s worth a read. You can also find the studies it cites here and here.