Amidst the rising urgency of climate mitigation, strategies remain heavily dominated by the energy, forestry, and transport sectors as the primary sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, food systems—which account for more than a quarter of Indonesia’s emissions—remain on the periphery of climate policy. This critical gap was the focus of the 6th Bincang Pangan Sehat Lestari (BPSL) series held on 11 December 2025. The event brought together experts, policymakers, and practitioners from both government and NGOs to bridge this divide.
The 6th Bincang Pangan Sehat Lestari session was attended by over 100 participants, both in person and virtually via Zoom
Without mitigation, the financial burden of climate adaptation is growing significantly
The frequency and intensity of extreme weathers are increasing in Indonesia. Data from the National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB) shows that disasters between 2022 and 2024 were dominated by floods (4,206 incidents) and extreme weather (3,062 incidents), with hydrometeorological events accounting for 99.34% of the total. This escalation is driven by rising GHG emissions. Indonesia contributes approximately 2.3% of global emissions, totalling 1.24 Gt CO2e. This affected the formation of Tropical Cyclone Senyar and the influence of La Niña which triggered floods exceeding 300 mm of daily rainfall, demonstrating a lethal impact of record-high sea surface temperatures. Together with deforestation, this resulted in recent disasters in Sumatra with over 1000 death and over 68 trillion IDR Economic Losses.
Ifan Martino, Food Coordinator at the Directorate of Food and Agriculture, stated: ”The National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) projects potential losses due to climate impacts are IDR 544 trillion, without policy intervention.” With recent disasters, the cost of adapting to the impacts of climate change will only grow and our policy intervention is insufficient. Therefore, Indonesia needs stronger climate mitigation measures.
GAIN Indonesia highlighted that food systems are one of major sources of GHGs emissions. The EAT-Lancet Commission estimates that they contribute nearly 30% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In Indonesia, more than 26% of GHG emissions come from the food systems, which include emissions from agriculture production (13%), food system-related land use (6%), food loss and waste/FLW (7%), and energy consumption across food industries.
The Policy Gap: Limited mitigation measures on food systems in the Second NDCs
Haruki Agustina, Director of Climate Change Mitigation at the Ministry of Environment, highlighted that in the Second Nationally Determined Contribution (SNDC) submitted ahead of the COP30 Summit, emissions reduction targets for food systems are confined to the agricultural sector. These targets remain meager, at just 0.3–0.4% by 2030, and focus almost exclusively on agricultural production. Consequently, critical areas such as consumption patterns, dietary choices, and FLW receive far less attention.
In contrast, Ifan Martino added that the 2025-2029 National Medium-Term Development Plan (RPJMN) sets an emissions intensity reduction target of 62.37% and aims to reduce food loss and waste by 15-25% in 2029. Bappenas (Ministry of Planning) has also established the National Strategic Pathway on Indonesia’s Food Systems Transformation. This vision aims to build a food system that is healthy and nutritious, inclusive, fair, resilient, and sustainable through the regionalization of local biodiversity and aquatic foods. However, these commitments are not yet reflected in the SNDC.
Considering existing national strategic plans or priority programmes, GHGs emission from food systems may be increased in 2030. This is projected from land use change, agriculture intensification, and potential food loss from the “Food Estate” programs; 1.4 to 5 million tonnes of potential food waste from the Free Nutritious Meal (MBG) programme (Bappenas, 2025); and emissions from 2 million newly imported dairy cows. If left unaddressed, these factors will add significantly to Indonesia’s emissions profile.