Jatiwaringin Landfill Fire Exacerbates El Niño Impact

by Rachel Morgan News Editor

A fire at the Jatiwaringin landfill in Tangerang Regency has burned for seven days, consuming roughly 80 percent of the site. The blaze has scorched between 15 and 18 hectares, forcing local residents to evacuate as the incident highlights systemic vulnerabilities in Indonesia’s waste management during the “Godzilla” El Niño climate phenomenon, according to reports from July 8, 2026.

Why the Jatiwaringin fire signals a systemic crisis

The fire at Jatiwaringin is not an isolated event but a consequence of widespread reliance on outdated disposal methods. Yuyun Ismawati, a senior advisor at the Nexus3 Foundation, reports that more than 400 landfills across Indonesia utilize open-dumping practices that lack essential leachate or gas management systems. This infrastructure gap leaves sites highly susceptible to combustion during extended dry seasons. Similar fires have recently affected the Pakusari landfill in Jember, suggesting a recurring regional pattern rather than a singular accident.

How climate change and waste management create a feedback loop

Landfill fires and climate conditions are now acting as a reinforcing cycle, according to Bondan Andriyanu, advocacy and outreach manager at the CERAH Foundation. El Niño triggers extreme droughts, drying out massive waste piles and increasing their flammability. Once ignited, these fires release significant greenhouse gases—specifically methane—into the atmosphere. Bondan notes that methane possesses a global warming potential 21 to 28 times higher than carbon dioxide, which further intensifies the climate crisis and fuels the extreme weather patterns characterizing the current El Niño.

Day 5 Update: Jatiwaringin Landfill Fire Extinguishment Efforts | AKIM tvOne

What happens next for landfill safety and public health

Future risks may persist unless the government shifts from reactive evacuations to proactive mitigation. Yuyun Ismawati advocates for the establishment of legally binding air quality thresholds that would trigger evacuations before fires escalate into emergencies. Such standards would prioritize the protection of vulnerable groups, including children and those with respiratory conditions. Recommended monitoring metrics include expanding current air quality checks to track PM2.5, PM10, carbon dioxide, sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, heavy metals, and dioxins.

Analysts suggest that long-term prevention requires the central government to provide consistent operational budgets to regional authorities. Without systematic risk mitigation, experts like Bondan warn that methane emissions from mismanaged dumpsites will remain a “ticking time bomb,” necessitating an accelerated transition to clean energy and stricter methane controls to curb the escalating climate threat.

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