Indonesian women's livelihoods upended by electric vehicle industry expansion

In Indonesia's quest to dominate the electric vehicle market, Sulawesi women report losing their farms for nickel mining, crucial for battery production.

Alex Stambaugh and Masrur Jamaluddin report for CNN.


In short:

  • Sulawesi's pepper farmers, predominantly women, face land seizures as Indonesia accelerates nickel mining for electric vehicle batteries.
  • The loss of land not only disrupts traditional farming but also poses significant economic and social challenges for local communities.
  • Despite Indonesia's electric vehicle ambitions, the environmental and human costs raise critical questions about sustainable development.

Key quote:

"If we weren't evicted, we could have still earned millions of rupiahs. We're not rich people, but it's enough to cover our daily living costs."

— Masita, affected farmer in East Luwu

Why this matters:

This story highlights the complex intersection of environmental progress and human rights. While Indonesia's push toward electric vehicles marks a step toward sustainable energy, it also underscores the need for ethical and equitable resource extraction. How can we balance technological advancement with the protection of local communities and their livelihoods?

In push to mine for minerals, clean energy advocates ask what going green really means

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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