Bali to Shut Down Suwung Landfill by December 2025: What Koster’s Plan Means for Residents, Tourism, and the Island’s Future

Bali to Shut Down Suwung Landfill by December 2025

Bali to Shut Down Suwung Landfill by December 2025

Bali Governor Wayan Koster has delivered one of the island’s most consequential environmental decisions in recent years: the complete shutdown of the Suwung landfill, effective 23 December 2025. The announcement, delivered to Denpasar City and Badung Regency officials, marks the end of decades of reliance on the largest waste disposal site in Bali—an area that, for years, has symbolized both the island’s waste crisis and the political hesitation to confront it.

TPA Suwung must be closed no later than 23 December 2025. Denpasar City and Badung Regency are prohibited from bringing any more waste to Suwung,” Koster said in Denpasar on Sunday.

A Sudden Deadline for a Long-Neglected Problem

Koster has instructed both regional governments to immediately prepare alternative waste-management systems. The options range from modern “teba” facilities and TPS3R units to decentralized composting machines and household-level waste processing.

The governor emphasized one key shift: Bali must begin separating organic and non-organic waste at home. Without household-based sorting, none of the proposed models will function properly.

“Residents must be socialized immediately to prepare independent or community-based waste processing with proper separation at the household level,” he said.

The technical work will require an integrated SOP coordinated between the provincial and municipal environmental agencies (DKLH Bali, DLHK Denpasar, and DLHK Badung).

Why Suwung Is Being Shut Down Now

Suwung’s closure is not simply a political choice—it follows a formal investigation by the national Ministry of Environment, which found violations of:

Open dumping, which has been illegal for years, continued at Suwung despite multiple warnings. Residents near the landfill have long complained about air pollution, groundwater impacts, and fires that recurrently blanket parts of Denpasar with smoke.

The ministry initially had grounds for criminal sanctions against the agencies involved.
But Koster requested that the central government pursue administrative sanctions only, arguing that criminal proceedings would not solve the operational problem.

The result is Ministerial Decree No. 921/2025, which orders the full termination of open dumping at Suwung within 180 days—expiring exactly on 23 December 2025.

The closure commitment was signed jointly by the Governor, the Denpasar Mayor, and the Regent of Badung.

A Turning Point—or a New Crisis in the Making?

From an environmental standpoint, Suwung’s shutdown is long overdue. But practically, Bali is now facing a steep deadline. Denpasar and Badung—home to the island’s densest tourism zones—generate the majority of Bali’s waste, and no alternative system of comparable scale currently exists.

This raises three pressing questions:

  1. Where will Bali’s trash go on 23 December 2025?
  2. Can household-level waste separation realistically be implemented island-wide in time?
  3. What happens to tourism zones if temporary overflow or illegal dumping occurs?

At this stage, neither Denpasar nor Badung has publicly announced a fully operational replacement facility.

Impact on Daily Life, Tourism, and the Expat Community

For residents and local businesses, the impact may be immediate:

For tourism and expat-heavy areas like Kuta, Seminyak, Canggu, Jimbaran, and Sanur, the pressure is even greater. These areas rely heavily on reputation, cleanliness, and predictable municipal services.

Bali’s tourism model is vulnerable to visible failures in waste management. Even small disruptions—overflowing bins near beaches, slow pickups at villas, or roadside dumping—can circulate globally within hours via visitor videos.

Koster’s Political Gamble

Governor Koster’s decision is notable for its political weight. The closure announcement puts full responsibility on regional governments that, for years, depended on Suwung as a low-cost solution.

The question is whether the deadline is:

The timing—two days before Christmas—is particularly sensitive. December is one of Bali’s busiest months, with tourist arrivals at their annual peak.

If alternative systems fail, the fallout will be highly visible.

A Needed Wake-Up Call

In fairness, Koster is addressing a problem that previous administrations postponed for decades. Suwung’s environmental footprint is severe, and its collapse was inevitable. Bali cannot continue relying on a landfill that routinely catches fire and produces toxic emissions.

But decentralizing waste management requires:

Those systems cannot be built in a few months unless the government treats this as a full-scale emergency.

What Bali Needs to Do Now

For the shutdown to succeed, Bali must immediately:

  1. Launch a major island-wide public campaign on household waste separation
  2. Expand TPS3R and teba facilities with real operational capacity
  3. Partner with the private sector for processing technology and financing
  4. Standardize waste collection schedules across tourism zones
  5. Ensure waste pickup continues uninterrupted during the transition
  6. Enforce regulations on illegal dumping and improper sorting

Failure in any of these areas could create cascading issues.

The Bigger Picture: Bali’s Waste Problem Is Not Just About Suwung

The heart of the crisis is not the landfill. It is the system that feeds it.

Most of Bali’s waste arrives unsorted, making composting, recycling, and energy recovery nearly impossible.
Without sorting, decentralized systems will clog, overflow, or break down.

Suwung is closing, but Bali’s real challenge is transforming behavior—household by household, business by business.

Looking Ahead

The shutdown of Suwung marks the end of an era. Whether it becomes a turning point or a crisis depends on how quickly Denpasar and Badung can adapt.

For residents, expats, and visitors, the next 12 months will define Bali’s environmental trajectory for the next decade.

One thing is clear:
Bali can no longer postpone the fundamental work of managing what happens after we throw something away.

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