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Ensuring sustainable urban transformation in Indonesia

Navigating Indonesiaโ€™s Massive Demographic Pivot

The first two decades of the 21st century have witnessed a phenomenon unprecedented in human history: the hyper-acceleration of urbanization across the developing world. We are no longer living in an era of rural expansion; we are firmly in the Age of the City. For Indonesia and its peers, this transition represents the single greatest challenge and opportunity for sustainable development.

1. The Statistical Surge: A Global Gravity Shift

The data reveals a startling shift in the world’s demographic center of gravity. In just twenty years, the urban population in developing nations jumped from 45% to 55%.

  • The 2035 Horizon: By 2035, while developed nations will reach a saturation point of 85% urbanization, the developing world will hit 65%.
  • The Global Hub: Most critically, by 2035, 80% of the worldโ€™s total urban population will reside in the cities of developing nations.

This is not just a change in where people live; it is a total restructuring of the global economy, energy demand, and social fabric.

2. Indonesia at the Epicenter: Beyond “Business as Usual”

For Indonesia, these numbers are a call to action. The rapid influx of people into urban centers like the Greater Jakarta area (Jabodetabek) and emerging secondary cities creates a “pressure cooker” effect on infrastructure.

The Risks of Unmanaged Growth:

  • Infrastructure Deficit: When urbanization outpaces planning, we face the “slumification” of cities, chronic traffic congestion, and fragmented waste management.
  • Environmental Strain: Rapid concrete expansion threatens local microclimates and worsens the “Urban Heat Island” effect.

The Sustainable Opportunity:

  • Economic Agglomeration: Dense cities, if well-managed, become engines of innovation and high-productivity jobs.
  • Service Efficiency: High-density living allows for more efficient delivery of clean energy, water, and public transit per capita compared to rural sprawl.

3. The Roadmap for Sustainable Transformation

Ensuring that Indonesiaโ€™s urban transformation is sustainable requires moving from Reactive Planning to Predictive Governance. Strategic Pillars for the 2035 Mandate:

PillarStrategyGoal
Integrated TransitPrioritizing TOD (Transit-Oriented Development).Decarbonizing mobility and reducing sprawl.
Circular InfrastructureImplementing “Waste-to-Energy” and eco-enzyme systems.Turning urban waste into a resource.
Digital GovernanceUtilizing “Smart City” dashboards for real-time monitoring.Data-driven decision-making for utilities.
Climate ResilienceExpanding green canopies and permeable surfaces.Mitigating flood risk and urban heat.

4. Conclusion: Designing for the Majority

By 2035, the world’s urban future will be written in the streets of cities in developing countries, including Indonesia. We cannot afford to follow the carbon-heavy blueprints of the past.

Our mission is clear: we must build cities that are not just large, but livable, resilient, and inclusive. The urban tide is coming; our task is to ensure it lifts all boats through sustainable design and visionary leadership.

source:
https://journal.pusbindiklatren.bappenas.go.id/lib/jisdep/article/view/80

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