ASIATODAY.ID, JAKARTA — After years of mounting ecological damage and public outrage, the Indonesian state has finally moved into open confrontation. The Ministry of Environment has filed civil lawsuits worth IDR 4.8 trillion (approximately USD 285 million) against six major corporations operating in North Sumatra, signaling a decisive shift from regulatory tolerance to legal accountability.
This is not a routine civil case. It is a political and legal statement: environmental destruction is no longer being treated as an unavoidable byproduct of development, but as a corporate liability with real financial consequences.
Deputy Minister for Environmental Law Enforcement at Ministry of Environment, Rizal Irawan, confirmed that lawsuits have been formally lodged against PT NSHE, PT AR, PT TPL, PT PN, PT MST, and PT TBS—companies operating within the Garoga and Batang Toru river basins, two watershed areas increasingly associated with recurrent flooding and severe ecosystem degradation in North Sumatra.
“The total value of the claims reaches IDR 4,843,232,560,026 (approximately USD 287.4 million). Of that amount, IDR 4.65 trillion (around USD 276 million) represents environmental damage, while IDR 178.48 billion (about USD 10.6 million) is allocated for environmental restoration,” Rizal said during a press conference in Jakarta on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Strict Liability: No Need to Prove Intent
Ministry of Environment emphasized that the lawsuits are grounded in the principle of strict liability, meaning the state is not required to prove intent, negligence, or wrongdoing on the part of the corporations. Demonstrable environmental damage and tangible harm to communities are sufficient grounds for liability.
“The objective is clear: to restore damaged ecosystems, reclaim the public’s right to a healthy environment, and end the long-standing impunity enjoyed by corporate polluters,” Rizal stressed.
The cases have been registered across multiple courts:
– Medan District Court (two cases),
– South Jakarta District Court (two cases),
– Central Jakarta District Court (one case).
Deadly Floods and the Cost of Corporate Activity
The legal action follows catastrophic floods and landslides across Sumatra in late 2025 that claimed more than 1,000 lives, exposing the lethal consequences of unchecked environmental degradation.
Prior to the lawsuits, Ministry of Environment had sealed several corporate operations in Aceh, North Sumatra, and West Sumatra, citing alleged environmental violations.
In December 2025, the ministry also summoned eight additional corporations operating in North Sumatra to account for their activities, including:
PT Agincourt Resources, PT Toba Pulp Lestari, Sarulla Operations Ltd, PT North Sumatra Hydro Energy, PT Multi Sibolga Timber, PT Perkebunan Nusantara IV – Batang Toru Estate.
These steps underline a growing acknowledgment by the state that Indonesia’s ecological disasters are structurally linked to industrial activities, particularly in upstream river systems and critical watershed zones long shielded by permits and weak enforcement.
What now stands before the courts is more than a compensation claim. It is a test of Indonesia’s environmental rule of law: whether legal institutions can meaningfully confront corporate power, or whether accountability will once again stop short of justice after public lives have already been lost. (ATN)
Follow Us at Google News and WA Channel
