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| illustration (ANTARA/Oky Lukmansyah) |
"The State of the Earth" - The Predicted Weather Shift (Mini Ice Age - 2032 !!)
More carmakers caught in headlights of VW engine-rigging scandal
Dieselgate (Old Energy)
- More Articles ....
- New Dutch law allows mass claim against Volkswagen over Dieselgate
- Volkswagen faces first mammoth diesel lawsuit on home turf
- Ford says US opened criminal probe over vehicle emissions
- As Dieselgate scandal widens, will Germany finally tackle transport emissions?
- German prosecutors charge ex-VW boss Winterkorn with fraud
- BMW, Daimler, VW broke antitrust rules, EU says in 'preliminary view'
- Audi to pay 800 mn euro fine in Germany over diesel cheating
- VW 'dieselgate' fraud: Timeline of a scandal
- Audi boss arrested in diesel probe
- VW says will pay 1 bn euro German fine over emissions cheating
- Germany orders recall of 774,000 Daimler cars in Europe over emissions
- Volkswagen ex-CEO Martin Winterkorn charged in the US over Dieselgate scandal
- BMW searched over suspicious emissions software
- German court paves way for diesel driving bans
- VW suspends chief lobbyist over emission tests on monkeys
- German carmakers under fire for tests on humans, monkeys
- Volkswagen given fine for misleading Dutch consumers over diesel scandal
- EU raids automaker BMW in post-Dieselgate cartel case
- German prosecutors make arrest in Audi Dieselgate probe
- Former VW engineer gets 40 months in 'dieselgate' scandal
- Dieselgate: the cozy ties between Germany's car industry and Berlin exposed
- Porsche hit by recall over emissions cheating
- New report: Massive collusion amongst German automakers
- Audi voluntarily recalls up to 850,000 diesel vehicles
- Daimler announces emissions recall of 3 mln diesel cars in Europe
- Total cost of VW 3.0-liter diesel settlement $1 bn: US authorities
- German government 'hiding CO2 emissions test results'
- US regulator finds another cheat device in Audi car
- German prosecutors extend 'dieselgate' probe to VW chairman
- Kia, Hyundai reach $41.2 mn settlement with US states
- ‘Delivery vans break pollution rules, emissions up to eight times higher’
- Suzuki faces claims of false fuel economy tests
- Nissan to be fined for 'emissions cheating' in South Korea
- More carmakers caught in headlights of VW engine-rigging scandal
- Automaker Mitsubishi admits manipulating fuel-efficiency tests
- Germany launches criminal probe against VW's ex-CEO
- Volkswagen CEO apologizes for cheating on US auto emissions tests
- German Finance Minister Schäuble sees 'greed' in VW scandal
Electric Cars (New Energy)
- More Articles ....
- Amsterdam brings in ‘bizarre’ plan to ban all but electric cars by 2030
- Sidestepping trade war, Musk breaks ground on Tesla Shanghai plant
- Volkswagen to spend 44 bn euros on 'electric offensive'
- Porsche first German carmaker to abandon diesel engines
- Daimler to offer electrified versions of all Mercedes 'by 2022'
- Electric cars catch on in Dutch company lease fleets
- France 'to end sales of petrol, diesel vehicles by 2040'
- Dutch scientists develop first bus to run on formic acid
- Elon Musk: tech dreamer reaching for sun, moon and stars
- Shell to add electric car battery charging points in some petrol stations
- Car manufacturers to power Europe with e-charging network
- No strings attached: Rotterdam trials wireless electric car charging
- Sweden wants EU to switch to emission-free cars by 2030
- Only electric cars should be sold in Netherlands from 2025
Iran's 'catastrophic mistake': Speculation, pressure, then admission
More Articles ....
Missing MH370 likely to have disintegrated mid-flight: experts
- More Articles ....
- Four charged over MH17, Russia slams 'unfounded allegations'
- MH17 may have been shot down ‘by mistake’, investigator tells NRC
- MH17 relatives urge Brussels to help in getting radar, satellite images
- Buk missile brought down MH17, airspace should have been closed
- Matthew message (Channelled by Suzanne Ward, Aug 3, 2014) - (MH17)
“… The Shift in Human Nature
You're starting to see integrity change. Awareness recalibrates integrity, and the Human Being who would sit there and take advantage of another Human Being in an old energy would never do it in a new energy. The reason? It will become intuitive, so this is a shift in Human Nature as well, for in the past you have assumed that people take advantage of people first and integrity comes later. That's just ordinary Human nature.
In the past, Human nature expressed within governments worked like this: If you were stronger than the other one, you simply conquered them. If you were strong, it was an invitation to conquer. If you were weak, it was an invitation to be conquered. No one even thought about it. It was the way of things. The bigger you could have your armies, the better they would do when you sent them out to conquer. That's not how you think today. Did you notice?
Any country that thinks this way today will not survive, for humanity has discovered that the world goes far better by putting things together instead of tearing them apart. The new energy puts the weak and strong together in ways that make sense and that have integrity. Take a look at what happened to some of the businesses in this great land (USA). Up to 30 years ago, when you started realizing some of them didn't have integrity, you eliminated them. What happened to the tobacco companies when you realized they were knowingly addicting your children? Today, they still sell their products to less-aware countries, but that will also change.
What did you do a few years ago when you realized that your bankers were actually selling you homes that they knew you couldn't pay for later? They were walking away, smiling greedily, not thinking about the heartbreak that was to follow when a life's dream would be lost. Dear American, you are in a recession. However, this is like when you prune a tree and cut back the branches. When the tree grows back, you've got control and the branches will grow bigger and stronger than they were before, without the greed factor. Then, if you don't like the way it grows back, you'll prune it again! I tell you this because awareness is now in control of big money. It's right before your eyes, what you're doing. But fear often rules. …”
Corporate Social Responsibility / Integrity - Ethical / Truthful and Transparent
Friday, January 28, 2011
Three killed in train collision
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
50 train accidents in 2010: Safety commission
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Govt to shake up railway firm`s management
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Landslide disrupts Bandung-Jakarta railway services
Monday, October 11, 2010
Homeless Person’s Candle Sparks Devastating Train Fire
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| The fire at Rangkasbitung Station on the outskirts of Jakarta destroyed 20 train carriages and disrupted train schedules.(Photo courtesy of Metro TV) |
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Indonesia train crash kills dozens
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| One train had been stationary at Petarukan station |
A traincrash near the Indonesian city of Pemalang in Central Java province has killedat least 35 people, officials say.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Country’s First Women-Only Train Cars Roll Out to Generally Positive Reception
KCJ to receive 50 more used carriages from Japan
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Special Train for Women Only to Begin on August 19
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Indonesia Orders New Trains From Bombardier
Tempo Interactive, Tuesday, 06 April, 2010 | 19:18 WIB
TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta: The Transport Department has handed Swedish vehicle producer Bombardier Inc. a 32-million euro contract to build ten sets of electric trains for Indonesian railway company PT Kereta Api.
The departement said the trains will reinforce Jakarta's commuter railway network and Bombardier is expected to complete the trains in 2011.
Safety and Technical Director of the Transport Department's railway directorate Hermanto Dwiatmoko said on Tuesday, german KfW banking Group provided soft loan for the trains through a deal signed with the Finance Department in 2008.
International tender was part of the requirements by KfW Bank for the order, which then held in europe and won by Bombardier which teamed up with PT Kereta Api.
“Bombardier will produce motor traction and control system while PT Kereta Api will assemble an install the system,” Hermanto said.
The project also involve order for two 5,000-kilowatt railway substations, won by Siemens – PT LEN Industri.
The railway directorate said to inspect production of the traction motor and control system in Bombardier's facility in Sweden, next week, although production is scheduled to begin later this year.
DESY PAKPAHAN
Friday, March 26, 2010
Dubai Group Ready to Start $1b Rail Project in Indonesia

Vice President Boediono calling for more private-sector investment in infrastructure in Jakarta on Thursday. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)
MEC Holdings, a subsidiary of the Dubai-based Trimex Group, said on Thursday that it had completed acquiring land for its $1 billion railway project in East Kalimantan and is ready to begin construction in the first half of this year.
The 130-kilometer railway is part of MEC’s plan to invest a total of $5.2 billion in the province, including in a coal terminal, an aluminum smelter and a power plant.
The projects will be developed by a joint venture with the Ras Al Khaimah Investment Authority and India’s largest aluminum producer, National Aluminium, MEC said in December.
The railway project will be run and operated by MEC Infra, a joint venture between MEC and Ras Al Khaimah. MEC Infra has obtained Indonesia’s first private railway license to develop a 130km integrated freight corridor from a mine site in Muara Wahau to a port in Bengalon, East Kalimantan.
Mashael Al Naimi, head of corporate communications at MEC, said in an e-mail to the Jakarta Globe that the major land acquisitions had been completed, with construction planned to start by the end of the first half.
MEC has said it expects the first commission of a cargo train in 2011.
Although many foreign developers have complained about the complex land-acquisition process and the frequent difficulties with local villagers, Madhu Koneru, the chief executive of MEC Holdings, said he did not find these traditional hurdles so severe.
“We were dealing with many stakeholders such as ministries in Jakarta, politicians, regional governments and villagers. The biggest concern they talked about was villagers who will not give up their land,” Koneru said.
He was speaking during The Economist’s Indonesia Summit in Jakarta on Thursday, which was attended by hundreds of prominent local and foreign business executives.
“But the truth is villagers are the easiest people to talk to. If you go to them and tell them that your plan will create jobs, they will give you their land,” he said, adding that government also proved especially cooperative in drafting the right policies.
Gita Wirjawan, the chairman of the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM), said MEC’s experience demonstrated that the usual roadblocks deterring many foreign investors from investing in Indonesia have been reduced.
“Their ability to clear most of the land for the 130km corridor in just a few months goes against the traditional perception that land clearance is nearly impossible to do in Indonesia,” Gita said.
Foreign investors have long complained of the difficulties they face in acquiring and clearing land for large infrastructure projects. Part of the problem is that land owners tend to demand excessive prices for their property once they know that a major developer is interested.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Trains from Japan to arrive in March
Indah Setiawati, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 02/08/2010 12:03 PM
Commuters in the city and surrounding areas will see the arrival of 10 of 40 used-electric train carriages imported from Japan in March, an official said.
“Every month, starting March, we will receive 10 carriages until June,” corporate secretary of PT KAI Commuter Jabodetabek (KCJ) Makmur Syaheran told The Jakarta Post.
The imported carriages, produced between the 1980s and 1990s, would add to the existing 386 electric trains. Makmur refused to reveal the trains’ prices.
The KCJ serves commuting routes across the Greater Jakarta area, including tracks linking the city’s main stations to Serpong, Bogor, Depok, Tangerang and Bekasi in Greater Jakarta.
Makmur said the KCJ, which has become a subsidiary of state-owned railway company PT Kereta Api (KA) since August 2008, tried to improve service quality by providing more carriages and repairing a number of train stations.
This month, he added, his company would open a bidding process for another procurement of 48 used carriages from Japan.
“We will procure carriages for electric trains every year. This is part of our effort to increase comfort quality,” he said.
With regard to the renovation of 17 train stations, Makmur said, this month it had entered the first phase, with Juanda station in Central Jakarta, for example, to be equipped with new benches.
He added that street vendors sprawling at the platform would be relocated.
Makmur said the KCJ would also develop an electronic ticketing system to many trains to curb the number of illegal passengers.
A resident of Depok Saleh Purwanto who commuted daily to his workplace in Jakarta, said he would welcome the imported used trains, saying that the news had been long awaited.
He said, however, that the additional number of trains would be meaningless if the KCJ did not improve their daily operational condition.
He said he expected on-time arrivals and departures of the electric train, but was often disappointed when faced with sudden schedule delays.
“Recently, the delay often happens Monday,” he said.
He said the delays were usually caused by train damage and troubled signals.
“If the problems are known, why doesn’t the company provide backup trains or evacuate passengers when the train stops before arriving at its destination?” he said.
Volunteer group KRLmania urged PT KAI Commuter Jabodetabek that the imported trains replaced economy-class electric trains that were unreliable.
The editorial page of the group’s website stated that PT KA should work on improving the signaling system of the electric trains, making it more reliable.
The KCJ currently manages 170 kilometers of railway lines and 56 railway stations.
It was reported that approximately 400,000 passengers from Greater Jakarta now use the trains every day, an increase from 325,000 last year. The KCJ targets to attract 1 million passengers per day by 2012. Furthermore, in 2014 it targets to carry 3 million passengers per day.
In order to improve its service, the company revealed that it would take all non-AC economy-class trains out of service and replace them with AC economy-class trains by 2011.
So far, more than 40 stations allow passengers to easily pass through without tickets.
It is common to see passengers on train roofs during peak hour. Incidents where illegal passengers were electrocuted were reported in 2009.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
More Railway Official Questioned in Corruption Probing
Tempo Interactive, Wednesday, 06 January, 2010 | 22:34 WIB
TEMPO Interactive, Jakarta: Corruption investigation into the railway directorate at the Transport Ministry resumed on Wednesday as the Corruption Eradication Commission (6/1) summoned Director General of the Railway Services Wendy Aritenang.
Wendy was questioned for indications of budget manipulation in the procurement of used train coaches from Japan in 2006, in which the anti-graft commission have charged one suspect, former Director general of the Railway Service Sumino Eko Saputro.
After the questioning on Wednesday night, Wendy said he did not know who signed the agreement with partner company in the project, adding that project officer was the one who responsible for the process and the prices.
The anti-graft commission suspected mark up for every used coach up to 9 million yen and estimated around Rp11 billion of state losses. The project received Rp48 billion goverment funding which was carried out during Hatta Radjasa's term before he became the State Secretary Minister following the second cabinet reshuffle.
CHETA NILAWATY
Monday, December 21, 2009
Railway company eyes 15% revenue rise in 2010
Nani Afrida, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 12/21/2009 9:05 PM
State railway company PT Kereta Api Indonesia (KAI) expects to net between 10 and 15 percent growth in revenue next year, banking on higher tariffs for its economy class, says an executive.
The company has proposed a 50 percent tariff rise to be effective by July next year, in anticipation of the government rejecting its request of additional state funds to help finance its public service obligation (PSO) program, which requires it to provide cheap transportation to as many people as possible.
That would eventually boost the company’s revenue, KAI president director Ignasius Jonan said Monday at the State Ministry for State Enterprises.
“This year, our revenue is expected to reach Rp 6 trillion [about US$620 million], which was far higher than last year,” Ignasius told reporters.
In 2008, KAI recorded Rp 4.32 trillion in revenue.
Jonan said the company had so far booked Rp 200 billion in net profits.
“The net profits this year have exceeded our budget target,” he said, adding that in 2008 KAI suffered Rp 83 billion in losses.
Friday, December 11, 2009
Jakarta to Step Up Raids On Train-Roof Riders

An illegal rider scrambles atop a train in Tangerang, Banten. (Photo: Afriadi Hikmal, JG)
Operations targeting train passengers who do not buy tickets will be intensified prior to the December holidays, a railway company spokesman said on Thursday.
Sugeng Priyono, a spokesman for state railway operator PT Kereta Api in the Jakarta region, said the company had been raiding more trains for ticketless passengers, including those who ride on the rooftops, together with the Ministry of Transportation and Jakarta Police.
“These ‘wild’ passengers are always a serious problem for us,” he said.
Poorer passengers on lines connecting stations in Jakarta to neighboring areas such as Bogor, Serpong, Depok and Bekasi frequently seek ways of using the train without paying. Passengers often board the engine carriage and pay a lower price to the train conductor— or ride on the roof of the train, risking their lives.
Sugeng said the ministry would determine the schedule of the raids.
Tundjung Inderawan, director general of railways, said inspections and raids were among his department’s priorities.
“If we find passengers who violate the ticketing regulation, they will have to be fined,” he said.
Tundjung said that one of his plans for 2010 was to revamp the commuter line with the Rp 3.7 trillion ($390 million) allocated by the central government.
“Some passengers choose to ride on the rooftop because the cars are too full, and that is often the case when there’s a delay and passengers accumulate in a station,” he said.
He added that the funds would also be used to renovate stations and improve human resources.
In 2010, the train company is expected to cooperate with TransJakarta to provide an electronic ticket that can be used for both the train and the busway.
“Especially when the e-ticketing is applied, it will help curb the number of freeloading passengers,” Tundjung said.
In 2008, PT KA tried a new tack, with rooftop riders being sprayed by security officers with orange-colored dye to humiliate them. However, this lasted only a short time and was not successful in keeping riders off rooftops.
Friday, October 30, 2009
Transport Minister Comes Out Swinging, Fires Jakarta Rail Officials

PT Kereta Api staffers standing next to the doors of an executive train during a ceremony earlier this year. (Photo: Yudhi Sukma Wijaya, JG)
In a show of what can happen when a new sheriff is in town, Indonesia's Minister of Transportation Freddy Numberi has fired two top railway officials for failing to be at their posts when he conducted a surprise inspection at one of Jakarta’s busiest train stations on Monday.
The newly-appointed minister ordered the dismissals of both the chief of Kota station in West Jakarta, Jatun, and his deputy, Suyatno, for failing to be in their offices when he visited.
Ignasius Jonan, the chairman of state-owned railway operator PT Kereta Api, said Freddy had instructed the company to prioritize the quality of its passenger service.
“We appreciate the minister’s decision because Jatun had indeed failed to carry out his responsibilities,” Jonan said.
Jatun was reportedly replaced by the former head of Bekasi station, Rudi Krisno, and moved to Kereta Api’s headquarters in Bandung, where he will handle administrative duties.
Taufik Kurniawan, chairman of the House of Representatives’ Commission V, which oversees transportation affairs, said he supported Freddy’s decision to dismiss the officials for neglecting their duties.
“The absence of a station chief could be dangerous should something bad happen,” he said.
Taufik declined to comment on whether he felt the decision by Freddy was excessive, only saying ministers had different styles of leadership.
“Leadership styles are different from one minister to the next,” he said. “As long as his move was aimed at improving the performance of the transportation industry, we support it.”
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
GE sees Indonesia as regional locomotive assembly hub
The Jakarta Post | Mon, 10/05/2009 1:52 PM
General Electric is considering making Indonesia its assembly hub for locomotives for the Asia market, hoping to capitalize on the rising demand in the country and other countries in the region.
CEO Jeffrey Immelt said last week that the assembly plant would be developed in cooperation with local partners which already had long experience and a track record in the locomotive business.
“I think Indonesia could become a center of excellence for the locomotive business in the [Asian] region. It could be a great location from which to export to other countries in the region,” he said, after addressing a discussion entitled “Innovation as the driving Force for Economic Transformation”.
He said Indonesia was capable of functioning as a locomotive assembly hub as it already had railway-related industries, with have long experience and good quality human resources, plus the technological capacity to develop the business.
Recently, GE, which was ranked no. 4 in BusinessWeek’s 2008 among the world’s most innovative companies, has secured an order from the state-owned railway operator PT Kereta Api to make 20 new locomotives at the total price of US$40 million. The locomotives will be delivered between 2010 and 2011.
Satya Heragandhi, GE Transportation’s Southeast Asia Sales Director, said that for the next five years the state-owned operator would need about 150 locomotives valued at $300 million to improve its railway services in Java and Sumatra, following the government’s decision to liberalize the railway business, which has previously been a PT Kereta Api monopoly.
In the period 2004 to 2009 PT Kereta Api had ordered 10 locomotives from GE and all had been delivered, he said.
“As the railway industry would be liberalized by 2010, and there is a commitment on the part of the Indonesian government to rejuvenate the railway services in Indonesia, particularly in Sumatra and Kalimantan, so there will be a boom in railway-related businesses,” he said.
He said the locomotives were not completely made in the US at Erie.
“Only the engines and some key parts are made there. The other components are made and assembled by PT INKA.
“I think the local content of locomotives [assembled in Indonesia] has increased from just 15 percent five years ago to more than 21 percent now,” he said.
Kereta Api’s President Director, Ignasius Jonan said recently that the company was committed to improving its services, including safety, comfort and the punctuality of its train services.
He said his company’s development would be directed in future more towards freight services rather than towards passenger services as was the present case.
Satya noted that the growing investments in the locomotive sector were partly the results of a meeting in 2006 between Immelt, his company’s CEO, and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
They had discussed the possibilities for GE investing in the country’s infrastructure, particularly in the railway sector.
GE Transportation is a subsidiary of the widely diversified business group GE, which is a leading global player in railroads, marine and shipping, mining and drilling and in turbines and wind generation.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Exodus

Would-be travelers line up for train tickets at Gambir Station in Central Jakarta on Monday. Many Jakartans are heading to their hometowns and villages to vote during the legislative elections that fall on Thursday. JP/R. Berto Wedhatama
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Indonesia offers US$6.14 bln high-speed rail project
Jakarta (ANTARA News/Asia Pulse) -- Indonesia's Transport Ministry has invited investors to build a US$6.14 billion high-speed train and track project covering a distance of 683 kilometers between Jakarta and Surabaya in East Java.
Railway Director General Wendy Aritenang Yazid said the government will facilitate the process of securing the license and guarantee legal certainty for investors agreeing to build and operate the project.
Prospective investors may build and operate the project without involving the state-owned railway company PT Kereta Api, Yazid said.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
IBM Jumps on the High-Speed Rail to China
Fastcompany, BY Ariel Schwartz, Wed Mar 25, 2009 at 1:50 PM

Oil prices may not be rising quite as dramatically as they were a year ago, but mass transportation--and more specifically, high-speed rail--is still growing in scope and importance. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), three quarters of G-20 countries (including France, China, Germany, Indonesia, and Italy) plan to increase funding for transportation infrastructure. And since the cornerstone of any successful transportation network is reliable computer technology, it's not surprising to hear that IBM is jumping on the high-speed rail train.
The computer giant announced plans today for high-speed rail projects in China, Taiwan, and the Netherlands. IBM will be responsible for managing maintenance, logistics, and IT needs in the China and Taiwan projects, while the Netherlands will rely on the company for resource utilization. It's not a small job.
In the Netherlands, IBM will oversee nearly 5,000 trains passing through a network of 279 stations. The Guangzhou Metro Corporation (GZ Metro) transports 2 million passengers per day across 60 stations, and is investing $1.76 billion this year to expand the network.
All of this is great news for denizens of these three countries, but what about those of us in the United States? When do we get our fancy high-speed rail lines? Relatively soon, if the U.S. government's $8 billion in rail-line stimulus funds goes ahead as planned. And when we do get our high-speed rail, IBM is likely to be a part of it. The company, which manages Amtrak's reservation system, is already angling for a chunk of the stimulus money. In the end, IBM might be known more for its ubiquitous transportation software than its consumer technology.




