Jakarta Globe, November 25, 2013
As many as
21 agreements worth millions of dollars have been signed between Indonesian and
Dutch companies in various sectors during the visit of the Dutch Prime Minister
Mark Rutte to Jakarta last week.
Retno LP
Marsudi, the Indonesian ambassador to the Netherlands, described the visit as
“a big success” in term of the acceptance of the visit by the Indonesian public
and results that were achieved.
“We have
achieved so many concrete results during the visit,” she said.
The two
governments signed several agreements to bring the relations to a new era, with
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono praising Indonesia-Dutch relations as
providing concrete solutions to Indonesian problems while Rutte describing the
bilateral cooperation being very beneficial to both nations after their meeting
on Nov. 20.
Rutte
brought with him nearly 200 businesspeople from 110 companies, the biggest ever
Dutch delegation to visit Indonesia. The group includes the Dutch biggest
companies, such as Phillips and Friesland Campina.
Both
Yudhoyono and Rutte launched the unprecedented comprehensive partnership that
aimed to boost cooperation in at least 11 sectors, including water management,
logistics, infrastructure, food security, agriculture, energy and education.
Hatta
Rajasa, Indonesian chief economic minister, said that Indonesia expected to
double trade and investment with the Netherlands from the current $5 billion
and $1.3 billion respectively in five years.
“We will
work harder because this is a new opportunity, especially since we have reduced
license procedures, increased transparency and provided incentives,” he added.
He
expressed the hope that Indonesia could become a marketing base for Dutch
companies to enter Southeast Asia by 2015. Similarly, the Netherlands could
become the base for Indonesian companies hoping to enter Europe.
“We want to
become a single market by 2015. We hope that Indonesia can become the base for
Dutch companies to enter the Asean market and, in turn, Rotterdam in the
Netherlands can become our base to expand into the European market,” he said.
With regard
to the national coastal development management, he said the Dutch government
had expressed its intention to help and participate in the Great Sea Wall
project, which is expected to start in 2014.
The
Netherlands has funded a plan for a massive sea wall in Jakarta Bay to prevent
tidal flooding and to manage the flow of water within the capital.
The area
behind the 35-kilometer-long, 15-kilometer-wide wall will be turned into office
complexes, malls and other commercial buildings. There is even a plan to
relocate all government offices to the area once it is completed by 2025.
“We are
cooperating with the Netherlands. We plan to carry out the project together. After
the master plan is finished, we will offer it as a public-private cooperation
project,” Hatta added.
In
business-to-business deals, Van Oord, a Dutch port company, will work on a $27
million project to create five islands around Tanjung Perak port in Surabaya.
An industrial estate will be built on the new land.
“Indonesia
faces big marine engineering challenges,” Van Oord chief executive Pieter van
Oord said, after the contract signing at Tanjung Priok in Jakarta in the
presence of Rutte.
“The broad
experience of Dutch engineers in protecting low-lying areas and the
construction of land makes good cooperation possible.”
Work on the
project will start in December and will continue until spring 2014. The project
will involve dredging 4,000,000 cubic meters of sand from the sea bed and using
it to construct five islands with a total area of 220 hectares. The contract
will also include the installation of rock. Van Oord will be deploying a large
trailing suction hopper dredger on the project.
In food
security and agriculture, the Indonesian Horticultural Seed Producers
Association (Hortindo) and its Dutch counterpart agreed to cooperate in
developing horticulture in Indonesia. “For us, cooperation is very important
because the Netherlands is the world’s second-largest exporter of horticultural
products,” Hortindo spokesman, Glenn Pardede said.
“The Dutch
investors want to develop potato and large yellow onion plantations in
Indonesia,” he noted.
In the
education and health sectors, several universities in the Netherlands signed
agreements with their counterparts in Indonesia.
Hasanuddin
University in Makassar and the Academic Medical Center of the University of
Amsterdam (AMC) agreed to work together to create a state-of-the-art heart
center in the eastern Indonesia’s biggest city.
Meanwhile,
Erasmus University, a Dutch university with a leading health center in Europe,
signed agreements with Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta and Airlangga
University in Surabaya to build health research centers for patient care.
On
logistics and training, the Bandung Institute of Technology, Surabaya Institute
of Technology, the Indonesian Transport Operators Association and the
Indonesian Logistics Association teamed up with Dutch’s STC and Panteia/NEA to
enhance cooperation on education, training, capacity development, research and
consultancy in transport and logistics.
In the
aviation and airport sectors, the Indonesian Civil Aviation Training Center and
JAA will work together to boost the aviation safety training to meet
international aviation safety standards while becoming a center of excellence
in the region.
The string
of accidents that have rocked Indonesia’s aviation industry, raising concerns
in the safety standards applied by the country’s industry.
In
addition, Indonesia’s Jaya Teknik and Dutch Vanderlande Industries signed a
contract on improving the handling of baggage at the New Soekarno-Hatta
International Airport Terminal 3.
Especially
in palm oil plantation, Vice President Boediono asked Rutte to help Indonesia
overcome obstacles that had hindered its palm oil exports to the Europe.
“Palm oil
is a very important and sustainable industry in Indonesia. We hope that palm
oil exports will increase again,” Boediono told Rutte during their meeting last
Friday.
In
response, Rutte said that he would try to resolve bottlenecks in Indonesian
palm oil exports.
“I
understand that there are 3.7 million workers in the palm oil industry, and
that palm oil is a large and important industry for Indonesia. Hopefully, it
can gradually improve,” he said.
Boediono
also asked the Netherlands to cooperate in developing Indonesia’s depleted
infrastructure, many said has become the main stumbling block for the country
to develop further into an advance nation.
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