Indonesia to expand farmland by 3 million hectares in self-sufficiency drive

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s incoming president Prabowo Subianto plans to expand food crops’ planting areas by three million hectares (7.4 million acres) in the next five years to cultivate staples in a food self-sufficiency drive, an official said.

Prabowo, who won the February presidential election by a convincing margin, has pledged to achieve food self-sufficiency in the next four years after he takes office on Oct. 20.

Indonesia currently has 7.4 million hectares of farming area, a 8.5% decline compared to 8.08 million hectares in 2015, government data showed, due to land conversion for housing and industrial areas.

Prabowo wants to expand this by 3 million hectares – roughly the size of Belgium – to plant rice, corn and soybeans, said Sudaryono, a politician from Prabowo’s Gerindra party, who was appointed as deputy agriculture minister under the outgoing government in August to help prepare for the president-elect’s flagship programmes ahead of his inauguration.

“To secure future (supply) for the next decades, it is deemed necessary to create new rice fields. Currently we are planning a total 3 million hectares of new planting areas,” Sudaryono said in a forum with oil palm farmers this week.

The ministry is currently looking for ways to utilise swamps for rice cultivation in South Sumatra and Central Kalimantan provinces, as well as the easternmost region of Papua.

Environmentalists have expressed worries the expansion of agriculture farming in places like Papua could drive deforestation in some of Indonesia’s last pristine rainforests, but Sudaryono said this would not be the case.

“Do not assume that we will clear three million hectares of pristine forests to be converted as rice fields,” he said.

“There are swamp lands that we can manage the drainage … so that we can plant paddy,” he added.

Indonesia turned about 100,000 hectares of swamps in South Sumatra province into rice fields earlier this year to boost its rice production.

Indonesia’s rice output is predicted at 30.86 million metric tons this year, not enough to meet its estimated total demand of 31.21 million tons. Jakarta has approved 3.6 million tons of rice import quota for 2024.

($1 = 15,660.0000 rupiah)

This post is originally published on INVESTING.

  • Related Posts

    Oil prices dip, set for weekly losses on Trump energy plans

    Investing.com– Oil prices fell in Asian trade on Friday and were headed for weekly declines as U.S. President Donald Trump called for lower crude prices and higher energy production in…

    Oil falls on prospect of Trump pushing up crude supplies

    By Laila Kearney (Reuters) – Oil markets sank on Friday, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump pressured OPEC and its de facto leader Saudi Arabia to lower prices in…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Oil prices dip, set for weekly losses on Trump energy plans

    • January 24, 2025
    Oil prices dip, set for weekly losses on Trump energy plans

    Oil falls on prospect of Trump pushing up crude supplies

    • January 24, 2025
    Oil falls on prospect of Trump pushing up crude supplies

    Trump orders crypto working group to draft new regulations, explore national stockpile

    • January 23, 2025
    Trump orders crypto working group to draft new regulations, explore national stockpile

    COP30 in Brazil set to spotlight developing countries’ climate finance needs

    • January 23, 2025
    COP30 in Brazil set to spotlight developing countries’ climate finance needs

    Trump orders crypto working group to draft new regs, explore crypto stockpile

    • January 23, 2025
    Trump orders crypto working group to draft new regs, explore crypto stockpile

    US exit from Paris climate deal complicates finance targets, says COP30 head

    • January 23, 2025
    US exit from Paris climate deal complicates finance targets, says COP30 head