http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2237&Itemid=226


Indonesia's Big Rail Plans

      Written by John Berthelsen     
      Wednesday, 13 January 2010 
     
      Might as well dream big dreams... 

      Indonesia is either about to get the most advanced high-speed rail 
operation in the world -- or it isn't. On Jan. 7, the Ministry of 
Transportation announced in Jakarta that following a 90 day feasibility study, 
work will begin this year to build a US$3 billion high-speed 357-km railway 
connecting Jakarta to the West Java cities of Bandung and Cirebon.

      It isn't just any high-speed rail system, and its untested technology 
inspires a certain amount of doubt about its viability. It is a "Hydrogen 
Hi-Speed Rail Super Hiway." H2RSH, as it is called, is not only a maglev - a 
system levitated above the tracks by magnetism - but one that would float above 
dual tracks through which electricity, water, fibre-optics and gas would flow, 
according to a US-based publication called the Infrastructurist.  Although it 
is expected to be completed in two years, no prototype has yet been built. 

      Solar panels inlaid in the track would provide the energy to move the 
trains and convert water to hydrogen to be stored for future use as fuel. The 
line would form the backbone of the government's US$500 billion West Java 
Economic Corridor, which also includes the construction of a new international 
airport and seaport. 
      "H2RSH has been years in the making so we are very pleased to see this 
unprecedented yet groundbreaking project move forward," Martjin Mollet, the 
Managing Partner for Creative and Strategic Marketing for the San 
Francisco-based CAEDZ Eco Synesis Group, which heads the consortium to build 
the project, said in an email to Asia Sentinel. "The Hydrogen High-speed Rail 
Super Highway is part of the West Java Regional Economic Corridor that CAEDZ is 
co-developing with the West Java Provincial government."

      CAEDZ Eco Synesis Group says it heads a consortium including the German 
engineering company Obermeyer Planen +Beraten GMBH, Asian Energy Ltd., the 
Malaysian engineering company Pembinaan Aktif Gemilang Sdn Bhd, Aon Risk 
Services, Aqua-PhyD, Aruna Solutions, Asian Energy Ltd., Tricap Group, 
Copernicus International, eCompass Group, Fidelity National Financial, Global 
Green Management, McGladrey & Pullen, Modular Integrated Technologies, 
Interstate Traveler and Tum Geotechnical Research. 

      According to Marjorie Hoeh, the CAEDZ director of Investment, Finance and 
Business Development in an email, the concept behind the hydrogen-powered 
maglev train was created by Justin Sutton, the Michigan-based founder of an 
entity called Interstate Traveler, which has come up with a series of concepts 
that can only be described as startling, including "BioDome Humanitarian 
Complexes" that according to Sutton were designed for planets with no 
atmosphere but are equally suitable for war-torn countries like Afghanistan. 
None have been built.

      CAEDZ itself thinks big. Very big. A consortium of "planners, architects, 
designers, engineers, economists, sociologists, educators, environmentalists, 
futurists, advocacy groups, technology vendors, developers, construction groups 
and product suppliers, its aim appears to be nothing less than to redesign the 
world. 

      It seeks to "develop a seamless, cohesive, and sustainable global 
community ... a social and environmental blueprint that encompasses all of the 
key elements needed for successful quality and technologically advanced 
community that is appropriately and economically sensitive to the balance 
between environmental biodiversity and human needs."

      According to its website, CAEDZ got its start through the design of 
"teleport cities," communities built to deliver direct and economic access to a 
large number of domestic and international satellites for users in the 
surrounding region. However, no teleport cities appear to have been built, 
including the one that brought the organization together in the US state of 
Nevada. 

      Putting the "social and environmental blueprint into practice" appears to 
be problematical. In 2005 CAEDZ announced it had an exclusive contract to 
design and build an "International Eco Health City" on 4,000 hectares in the 
Iskandar development in Malaysia across from Singapore, to include "several 
large hospital complexes, a medical university, medical research facilities, a 
biotech industrial park, four health resorts, and almost 10,000 homes" as well 
as "farmlands, parks, public transportation, schools, and shops needed make it 
a viable self-sustaining community."CAEDZ described it as "the largest 
sustainable development project yet undertaken in the world."

      The project seems to have fallen off the map. Martjin Mollet said the 
Nusajaya Eco Health City "was a concept city that CAEDZ introduced to the 
Malaysian authority. However that development is under full control of the 
state-owned Iskandar now." 

      "It never happened," said a source in Kuala Lumpur, beyond an initial 
story in Malaysia's Business Times. CAEDZ's website still cites it as alive and 
well, however. 

      Then there is the Project Indonesia Initiative, a "broad and 
comprehensive economic re-engineering development program that seeks to do 
nothing less than transform the country's "economy, environment, people, 
policies and infrastructure." 

      Among other things, CAEDZ says, it is in charge of bringing "massive 
beneficial change to Jakarta: rubbish landfills will be converted into a usable 
gas which will be turned into electricity and hydrogen fuel; all public 
transportation and taxis will be converted to hydrogen fuel, creating a 
hydrogen fuel economy; high-quality low-cost ecologically friendly housing, to 
be designed considering the needs of local communities, will be built for 
people currently living in makeshift housing; and new parks, public spaces, and 
commercial infrastructures will be created."

      The Jakarta project, CAEDZ says, is expected to create three to five 
million jobs in Jakarta alone, or one job each for a fourth to nearly half of 
Jakarta's 13.1 million citizens. 

      If there are skeptics, they aren't in Indonesia's Ministry of 
Transportation. 

      "We will facilitate the feasibility study and detail the engineering 
design for the project," Tundjung Inderawan, director general of railways at 
the Ministry of Transportation, told reporters on Jan. 7. It will be the first 
major infrastructure project in Indonesia not to involve public funds although 
no recent intercity train system has been built anywhere in the world without 
government participation.

      The feasibility study was signed Jan. 11. The project, Tundjung said, is 
expected to cost less to build than a conventional system, at US$10 million per 
mile, compared with $36 million per mile for conventional systems. By contrast, 
the Shanghai maglev system cost US$63 million per mile and a system being 
proposed for the United States is estimated to cost US$110 million per mile. 

      Maglev systems are also notorious for their exacting engineering. The 
357-km system CAEDZ is proposing runs across some of the most unstable geology 
in the world. Maglev systems also require absolutely constant electricity 
supply, as any power loss would cause the magnetic levitation to cease and the 
train, traveling in excess of 300 km per hour, would come into contact with the 
tracks with potentially disastrous results. 

      According to a 2007 law passed by the parliament, private-sector 
contractors and regional administrations can participate in building 
infrastructure across Indonesia. 

      "The private sector can propose railway construction," Tundjung said, 
adding that the government would monitor the process. Construction of the 357 
km line, he said, is expected to take two years. The Shanghai line built by the 
German Transrapid consortium, primarily composed of Thyssen Krupp and Siemens, 
took two and half years. It is 30 km long. The government has since suspended 
plans to build another maglev line between Hangzhou and Shanghai.
     


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke