The Pandemic Has Unraveled a Hard-Won Campaign to Save Bali’s Benoa Bay

Featured image: The proposed Benoa Bay reclamation project by PT Tirta Wahana Bali Internasional on its project website, Photo: NusaBenoa.com

A year ago, Bali’s environmentalist community was cautiously celebrating the cancellation of a massive land reclamation project planned for Benoa Bay. The permit for the 30 trillion rupiah ($2 billion) development plan to build 12 artificial islands — complete with a golf course, theme park and even a Formula One race course — expired before the project could obtain government approval.

On October 10, 2019, the Bali governor designated Benoa Bay a conservation area for religious and cultural activities and artisanal fisheries, protected from reclamation of any kind. For a brief moment after five years of relentless protests, it appeared that Benoa Bay would remain untouched.

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Barely 11 months later, the Balinese legislature gathered discreetly during the COVID-19 pandemic and approved a zoning plan for the area that would permit sand mining and an expansion of the harbor and airport.

These plans passed through gaping loopholes in the 2019 declaration that established a maritime conservation area in Benoa Bay. The Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (KKP) had designated 1,243 hectares (3,072 acres) as a maritime cultural protection area, but left the terms “revitalisation” and “reclamation” equivalent to each other. Green groups like the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) and the Balinese People’s Forum to Reject Reclamation (ForBALI) have expressed lingering doubts about the efficacy of the decree, as it’s still trumped by a presidential regulation that allows revitalisation (or reclamation) of 700 hectares (1,730 acres) in Benoa Bay.

The battle against land reclamation in Bali has been a tumultuous saga of protests that have featured punk rock bands, celebrities, football matches and local communities against Dubai-esque development plans. For the last six years the “Tolak Reklamasi” (Reject Reclamation) movement has fought to keep developers out of Benoa Bay. Sacred purification sites, coral reefs, mangrove forests and fisheries are at stake.

Also read: What Will Keep the Sea at Bay?

Zoning impacts on marine mammals and fisheries

Bali’s provincial council, the DPRD, approved the island’s 2020-2040 coastal zoning plan this past August. The plan includes significant provisions for extractive development in the following forms: