Batam

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Batam
—  City  —
Motto: " Batam , Menuju Bandar Dunia yang Madani "
(Batam, towards a civil global city)
Batam is located in Indonesia
Batam
Location in Indonesia.
Coordinates: 1°05′N 104°02′E / 1.083°N 104.033°E / 1.083; 104.033Coordinates: 1°05′N 104°02′E / 1.083°N 104.033°E / 1.083; 104.033
Country Indonesia
Province Riau Islands
Government
 • Mayor Drs. H.Ahmad Dahlan
Area
 • Total 715 km2 (276 sq mi)
Population (April 2012)
 • Total 1,153,860
 • Density Bad rounding here1,600/km2 (Bad rounding here4,200/sq mi)
Time zone WIB (UTC+7)
Postal code 29453
Area code(s) +62 778
Website http://batamkota.go.id/

Batam is an island, municipality, and the largest city (on the island) in Riau Islands Province of Indonesia. It is a Free Trade Zone, as part of the Sijori Growth Triangle, and is located 20 km (12 mi) off Singapore's south coast. The 715 km² (276 miles²) municipality, almost identical in size to Singapore, has a population of 1,153,860 (Civil Registry Survey April 2012).[1]

Contents

Geography[edit]

Batam is located west of Bintan Island, south of Singapore, north of Rempang and east of Bulan Island. The Riau Strait separates Batam and Bintan.

Batam has tropical climate with average temperatures between 26-32°C. Humidity in the region ranges from 73% to 96%. The region has a wet season from November to April and a dry season from May to October. Average annual rainfall is around 2,600 mm.[citation needed]

Administration[edit]

The local governmental offices are in Batam Centre. The largest community on the island is Lubuk Baja (formerly known as Nagoya). Other residential area include Baloi Garden, Sekupang, Nongsapura (Nongsa), Waterfront City (Teluk Senimba), Batu Ampar, Jodoh.

Batam City is divided into 12 sub-districts (kecamatan) - which include several adjacent islands such as Bulan, Rempang and Galang as well as Batam Island itself.

  • Batam Kota (central city)
  • Lubuk Baja
  • Nongsa
  • Sekupang
  • Batu Ampar
  • Belakang Padang
  • Bulang
  • Sagulung
  • Galang
  • Sungai Beduk
  • Batu Aji
  • Bengkong

Economy[edit]

Beginning in the 1970s, the island underwent a significant transformation from a largely forested area into a major harbor and industrial zone.[citation needed] Shipbuilding and electronics manufacturing are important industries on the island. Being close to ports of Singapore increases the speed for goods shipping and product distribution which benefits the island's economy, with lower labour costs and special government incentives, it is the site of many factories operated by foreign companies.[2]

Under a framework signed in June 2006, Batam, along with parts of neighboring Bintan and Karimun, are a part of a Special Economic Zone with Singapore; this zone eliminates tariffs and value-added taxes for goods shipped between Batam and Singapore.[3]

In 2010, approximately 58 percent of foreign tourists came from Singapore, and 13 percent from Malaysia.[4]

Batam has recently been exposed as a major facilitator of the controversial ivory trade.[5]

Transport[edit]

Batam Centre harbour from a ferry to Singapore.

The local ferry terminal ports connect to nearby Singapore and Bintan, and provides routes to Johor Bahru (Malaysia). There are five ferry terminals on the island: Harbourbay, Nongsapura Ferry Terminal, Sekupang, Waterfront City and Batam Centre International Ferry Terminal.

Hang Nadim Airport is the island's main airport, and has the longest runway in Indonesia.[6] Domestic flight include Pekanbaru, Palembang, Kalimantan, and Jakarta.

References[edit]

  1. ^ http://globalfmlombok.com/content/soal-mandalika-resort-dprd-ntb-studi-komparatif-dengan-pemkot-batam
  2. ^ "Indonesia President inaugurates Batam free trade zone". Xinhua General News Service. Jan 19 2009. 
  3. ^ Teo, Laurel (May 19, 2007). "Indon SEZ rules ready by end-May; Setting of a deadline likely to please potential investors". The Business Times Singapore. 
  4. ^ Singaporeans constitute 57 pct of tourists in Batam
  5. ^ http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/03/10/batam-alleged-transshipment-point-ivory-africa.html
  6. ^ Airports in Indonesia

External links[edit]