Unfortunately for the newly independent country, establishing wide-spread and effective infrastructure had not been a priority for the Dutch during their 300 year reign.
“The Netherlands built a water system for Jakarta that would benefit them and the small amount of land where they lived,” Ezra said. “For the city at large, they didn’t care. Everyone else needed to figure out a way to get clean water on their own — and they figured it out, by taking groundwater.”
“After our independence, the water system is still in place for years to come,” Ezra said. “There was never this huge ‘let’s restructure the water system’ — no, they decided to keep it.”
This means that for the majority of people living in Jakarta today, their only source of water is a hand-dug well. But the removal of water from underground aquifers at such a massive scale is causing the land to drop, and rapidly.