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Map of rivers of Jakarta (2012) The Special Capital Region of Jakarta, located on the north coast of western Java, has thirteen major rivers. The region contains 664 square kilometres (256 sq mi) of land and 6,977 square kilometres (2,694 sq mi) of water. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The project was continued through the Jakarta Emergency Dredging Initiative (JEDI) [10] of the government of Jakarta with the ministry of general work at the end of 2013 until 2014, [11] with the support of the building project to straighten the flow of Pesanggrahan river around ITC Cipulir, [12] and the building of dams in South Jakarta to ...
The last four digits (in green) represent the serial number of the river basin. The numbering of river basins follows the map index boxes of the 1:250,000 scale map, starting from the western part of the main island (the largest island), followed by smaller surrounding islands from the west. Example, the Citarum basin has a code "DAS220047".
Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities in Indonesian waters have caused huge losses for Indonesia. Overfishing, overcapacity, threats to the preservation of fish resources, unfavorable fishery business climate, the weakening of the competitiveness of firms and the marginalization of fishermen are the real impact of illegal fishing and destructive fishing activities.
The Mookervaart River (Mookervaart Canal; also written in Indonesian as Mokervart) is a canal connecting the Cisadane River in Tangerang and Kali Angke (Angke River) in Jakarta. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Constructed from 1678 to 1689, this 25–30 meter wide channel is one of the important flood control water channels in Jakarta.
The Jatikramat River (Kali Jatikramat or Kali Jati Kramat) is a river in Bekasi, West Java, and the eastern part of the Special Capital Region of Jakarta, Indonesia. [1] The lower portions of the original river have been channelized and directed into the eastern flood canal, "Banjir Kanal Timur", which continues to flow to the Java Sea in the district of Marunda, Cilincing, North Jakarta. [2]
This clickable map shows province of Indonesia as of 25 October 2012. Click on a province name to go to its list of rivers. ... Jakarta ↓. West Java. Central ...
The Angke River (Indonesian: Kali Angke or Sungai Angke, Chinese: 紅溪; pinyin: Hóng xī; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Âng-khe) is a 91.25-kilometre (56.70 mi) long river in Jakarta, Indonesia. The river flows from the Bogor area of West Java, [2] passing through the cities of Tangerang and Jakarta into the Java Sea [3] via the Cengkareng Drain. [4]