Indonesia Economic Outlook 2025 (Part III): Infrastructure

As the world’s largest archipelagic nation, Indonesia’s scattered geography makes infrastructure a perennial national priority.
Rising population and sustained economic growth have driven continual upgrades in transport and utilities, accelerating social progress and regional integration. Below is a concise, up-to-date survey of Indonesia’s roads, railways, aviation, maritime services, telecommunications and power sectors.
  1. Road Network
    • Total length (2024): 548,366 km
    – National highways: 47,024 km
    – Provincial roads: 54,845 km
    • Densest systems: Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi and Bali—home to the bulk of the population, industry and agriculture.
    • Expressways: 2,489 km operational by 2021, concentrated on Java; expansion is programmed under the government’s long-term infrastructure roadmap.
  2. Railways
    • Network length: 6,600 km nationwide
    – Java: 4,684 km (≈ 72.5 %)
    – Sumatra: well-served in key provinces; other large islands still embryonic.
    • Flagship project: Jakarta–Bandung High-Speed Rail (142 km, 350 km/h) launched in October 2023—Indonesia’s and Southeast Asia’s first HSR.
  3. Aviation
    • Critical for inter-island and international connectivity.
    • Main carriers: Garuda Indonesia, AirAsia, Lion Air.
    • Principal hubs:
    – Soekarno-Hatta (Jakarta)
    – Juanda (Surabaya)
    – Kualanamu (Medan)
    – Ngurah Rai (Denpasar/Bali)
    • Direct China routes: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Xiamen, Hong Kong ↔ Jakarta, Surabaya, Denpasar, operated by CA, CZ, MU, MF, CX/KA and GA.
  4. Maritime Transport
    • Ports: ~1,241 total, 33 major.
    • Top container ports:
    – Tanjung Priok (Jakarta): ~4.2 million TEU/year
    – Tanjung Perak (Surabaya): ~1.4 million TEU/year
    • Policy shift: PPP/BOT models now welcome private capital to boost capacity and global competitiveness.
  5. Telecommunications
    • Internet users (2023): 216 million (+2.67 % YoY).
    • Penetration is broad, but average speeds remain modest.
    • Key operators: Telkomsel (largest domestic), Indosat (largest foreign-invested).
  6. Power Supply
    • Installed capacity (2023): 91.17 GW (+8.8 %).
    • Electricity generated: 350,609 GWh (+5.1 %).
    • Strategy: diversify generation mix and expand renewables to meet future demand.
— End —
Next issue: Indonesia Economic Outlook 2025 (Part IV): Development Planning.
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