スタッフ紹介
Pratama Yudha Pradheksa

- 部門・職位
- 環境共生研究部門
外国人共同研究者 - 専門
- Science and Technology Studies (STS), Environmental Humanities, Envirotech
- 研究分野/キーワード
- The Intersection of Technology, Society, and the Environment
- 滞在期間
- 2025/09/09
2026/03/01 - 所属
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York, United States
- 連絡先
- pyudhap@gmail.com
Pratama Yudha Pradheksa
研究概要
Waste, Energy, and Incomplete Infrastructure in Indonesia
In Japan, waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerators are integral to the country’s waste management system and a familiar part of the landscape. But in Jakarta, Indonesia, a proposed modern WTE facility remains a ghost project, having been stuck in a state of incompletion for years. Why?
This research illuminates the complexity of Jakarta's ambitious Sunter ITF: a state-of-the-art project that exists only on paper and was first supported by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation. In doing so, it analyzes how multiple stakeholders perceive waste as a futuristic problem and the implications of employing predominantly technical solutions to solve it.
However, the research does not only center on the failings of the Sunter ITF. Rather, by turning to community-led projects in cities such as Bandung and Surakarta, it investigates how communities have challenged the conventional WTE top-down approach by contesting the idea of a singular, large-scale project and constructing their own infrastructure from the ground up. Their experience provides valuable lessons in attaining just and sustainable answers to the problems of waste and energy management.
This research illuminates the complexity of Jakarta's ambitious Sunter ITF: a state-of-the-art project that exists only on paper and was first supported by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation. In doing so, it analyzes how multiple stakeholders perceive waste as a futuristic problem and the implications of employing predominantly technical solutions to solve it.
However, the research does not only center on the failings of the Sunter ITF. Rather, by turning to community-led projects in cities such as Bandung and Surakarta, it investigates how communities have challenged the conventional WTE top-down approach by contesting the idea of a singular, large-scale project and constructing their own infrastructure from the ground up. Their experience provides valuable lessons in attaining just and sustainable answers to the problems of waste and energy management.