Evaluation of the Conformity of Marine Spatial Utilisation Activities (KKPRL) for Ports Sector in Palu Bay Indonesia

Nurdin Ahmadi, Suharyanto Suharyanto, Didit Eko Prasetiyo, Yeni Rahmawati, I Mario Ndricenning, Muhandis Sidqi, Munandar Jakasukmana, A Syahruddin, Reza Fauzi Bakri, Wahyu Hafid, Rosmawati Salasah, Syahrial Nasution

Abstract

The utilization of marine space requires regulation due to the multidimensional and overlapping interests in maritime areas. The increasing demand for marine space for various commercial and non-commercial purposes necessitates sustainable management strategies and legal governance to reduce cumulative impacts on the marine environment. The compliance level of marine spatial utilization activities (MSUA), particularly in port activities, is determined by three aspects: the extent realization aspect, the type of activities aspect, and the legal subject aspect. Progress in licensing and meeting MSUA obligations is evaluated using a matrix of suitability indicators with weighting and assessment for each indicator. The research findings indicate that, concerning the extent realization aspect used in the studied ports, compliance with the given MSUA is still observed. However, for the type of activities aspect and the legal subject aspect, progress in licensing and meeting MSUA obligations has not been fully adhered to. Thus, overall compliance is at a level of adherence with notes. Furthermore, at the business compliance level, operations are not conducted properly, as changes in status from non-commercial to commercial activities are not reported, potentially resulting in the loss of non-tax national revenue (PNBP). Regarding MSUA obligations, the indicators posing obstacles to compliance at ports are those related to the obligation of submitting written reports annually to the Minister of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries and reporting the establishment and/or placement of buildings and installations at sea to the agency responsible for hydrographic and oceanographic government affairs.

Keywords

greenport, sustainability, ocean space

Full Text:

PDF

References

Ahmadi, N, Kusumastanto, T & Siahaan, E. (2016). Studi Kasus: Pelabuhan Cigading-Indonesia Development Strategy of Greenport Case Study: Cigading Port-Indonesia. Warta Penelitian Perhubungan.

Ahmadi, N, Suwito, S. R, Christian, Y., & Hasriningtyas, S. (2024), Global and Indonesia Blue Economy Knowledge Map, Proceeding of 4th International Conference on Integrated Coastal Management and Marine Biotechnology, ICMMBT 2023, Bali.

Amr, E., Ahmed, I. (2022). The Relationship between the Green Port Concept and Competitiveness (A Comparative Applied Study for the Port of Tripoli)

Goldberg, E. D. (1990). Ocean Space: Use and Protection. Population and Development Review, 16, 221–234.

Kang, L., Ji, X., Zhao, L., Wang, Y., He, L., Guo, X., uang, H (2022). A Decision Support System for Marine Regulation. IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science.

(ISSC). (2022). Committee V.6: Ocean Space Utilization. Proceedings of the 21st International Ship and Offshore Structures Congress (ISSC 2022) – Xiaozhi Wang and Neil Pegg (Eds.).

KP-DJPL 689 Tahun 2022 tentang Pedoman Pengelolaan Pelabuhan Berkelanjutan Berwawasan Lingkungan Ditjen Hubla Kementerian Perhubungan, 2023).