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What Does Indonesia's Environmental Law Actually Mean? The 103 Definitions That Shape Compliance

What Does Indonesia's Environmental Law Actually Mean? The 103 Definitions That Shape Compliance

1.0 The Regulatory Foundation: Understanding PP 22/2021's Scope and Purpose

Government Regulation Number 22 of 2021 (Peraturan Pemerintah Nomor 22 Tahun 2021) represents Indonesia's most comprehensive environmental protection framework, implementing the foundational Law 32/2009 on Environmental Protection and Management as amended by the Job Creation Law (UU 11/2020). Article 2 establishes the regulation's scope: "Peraturan Pemerintah ini mengatur mengenai: a. Persetujuan Lingkungan; b. Perlindungan dan Pengelolaan Mutu Air; c. Perlindungan dan Pengelolaan Mutu Udara; d. Perlindungan dan Pengelolaan Mutu Laut; e. Pengendalian Kerusakan Lingkungan Hidup; f. Pengelolaan Limbah Bahan Berbahaya dan Beracun; g. Sanksi Administratif" (This Government Regulation governs: a. Environmental Approval; b. Water Quality Protection and Management; c. Air Quality Protection and Management; d. Marine Quality Protection and Management; e. Environmental Damage Control; f. Hazardous and Toxic Waste Management; g. Administrative Sanctions). This single regulation consolidates environmental governance across all major media—water, air, and marine environments—while establishing unified frameworks for hazardous materials management and enforcement mechanisms. The regulation contains 514 articles organized across 13 chapters and 15 technical annexes, making it one of Indonesia's most extensive subordinate regulations. Article 1 alone provides 103 legal definitions that form the interpretive foundation for every subsequent provision. These definitions are not merely semantic exercises; they establish precise legal thresholds that trigger specific compliance obligations, determine authority allocation between government levels, and define the boundaries of permissible and prohibited conduct. Understanding these foundational terms is essential because Indonesian administrative law interprets regulatory requirements strictly according to their defined meanings—a business activity that falls within one definition may face entirely different obligations than an activity that falls within another. The ten regulatory domains covered by PP 22/2021 create an integrated compliance ecosystem where environmental approval, quality standards, pollution control, and enforcement operate as interconnected elements (see Matrix 1.1 below).

Matrix 1.1: Ten Regulatory Domains Under PP 22/2021

No. Regulatory Domain Indonesian Term Primary Chapter Key Focus
1.1 Environmental Approval Persetujuan Lingkungan BAB II AMDAL, UKL-UPL, SPPL requirements
1.2 Water Quality Protection Perlindungan Mutu Air BAB III Freshwater, groundwater standards
1.3 Air Quality Protection Perlindungan Mutu Udara BAB III Ambient air, emissions standards
1.4 Marine Quality Protection Perlindungan Mutu Laut BAB III Coastal, marine water standards
1.5 Environmental Damage Control Pengendalian Kerusakan LH BAB VI Ecosystem damage criteria
1.6 B3 Waste Management Pengelolaan Limbah B3 BAB IV Hazardous waste lifecycle
1.7 Environmental Restoration Pemulihan Lingkungan BAB V Remediation requirements
1.8 Dispute Resolution Penyelesaian Sengketa BAB VII Mediation, arbitration
1.9 Supervision Pengawasan BAB VIII Environmental inspectors
1.10 Administrative Sanctions Sanksi Administratif BAB X Enforcement mechanisms

2.0 The Three-Tier Environmental Instrument System: AMDAL, UKL-UPL, and SPPL

Article 4 establishes the foundational requirement that shapes every business activity in Indonesia: "Setiap rencana Usaha dan/atau Kegiatan yang berdampak terhadap Lingkungan Hidup wajib memiliki: a. Amdal; b. UKL-UPL; atau c. SPPL" (Every planned Business and/or Activity that impacts the Environment must have: a. AMDAL; b. UKL-UPL; or c. SPPL). This three-tier system creates a graduated compliance framework based on environmental impact severity. AMDAL (Analisis Mengenai Dampak Lingkungan Hidup), as defined in Article 1(5), is "Kajian mengenai dampak penting pada Lingkungan Hidup dari suatu usaha dan/atau kegiatan yang direncanakan" (a study regarding significant impacts on the Environment from a planned business and/or activity). AMDAL represents the most rigorous assessment tier, applicable to activities with potential for significant environmental change. Article 5(1) specifies: "Amdal sebagaimana dimaksud dalam Pasal 4 huruf a wajib dimiliki bagi setiap rencana Usaha dan/atau Kegiatan yang memiliki Dampak Penting terhadap Lingkungan Hidup" (AMDAL must be held for every planned Business and/or Activity that has Significant Impact on the Environment). The determination of "significant impact" (dampak penting) is not subjective; Article 5(2) establishes two trigger categories: activities whose scale/size requires AMDAL, and activities located within or directly adjacent to protected areas (kawasan lindung). UKL-UPL (Upaya Pengelolaan Lingkungan Hidup dan Upaya Pemantauan Lingkungan Hidup) occupies the middle tier. Article 6(1) states: "UKL-UPL sebagaimana dimaksud dalam Pasal 4 huruf b wajib dimiliki bagi Usaha dan/atau Kegiatan yang tidak memiliki Dampak Penting terhadap Lingkungan Hidup" (UKL-UPL must be held for Business and/or Activities that do not have Significant Impact). The distinction is crucial: UKL-UPL applies when environmental impact exists but does not rise to the "significant" threshold. SPPL (Surat Pernyataan Kesanggupan Pengelolaan dan Pemantauan Lingkungan Hidup) covers the lowest-impact tier. Article 1(9) defines it as "pernyataan kesanggupan dari penanggung jawab Usaha dan/atau Kegiatan untuk melakukan pengelolaan dan pemantauan Lingkungan Hidup" (a commitment statement from the person responsible for Business and/or Activity to conduct environmental management and monitoring). SPPL applies to activities exempt from both AMDAL and UKL-UPL requirements (see Matrix 2.1 below).

Matrix 2.1: Three-Tier Environmental Instrument Comparison

No. Instrument Indonesian Full Name Impact Level Document Type Approval Required Article Reference
2.1 AMDAL Analisis Mengenai Dampak Lingkungan Hidup Significant (Dampak Penting) Full Environmental Impact Assessment Environmental Feasibility Decision Article 5(1)
2.2 UKL-UPL Upaya Pengelolaan dan Pemantauan Lingkungan Hidup Moderate (Not Significant) Standard Management Form Government Approval Article 6(1)
2.3 SPPL Surat Pernyataan Kesanggupan Pengelolaan dan Pemantauan LH Low Commitment Statement Self-Declaration Article 1(9)

Matrix 2.2: AMDAL Trigger Categories

No. Trigger Category Indonesian Text Determination Basis Examples Article Reference
2.1 Scale/Size Based jenis rencana Usaha yang besaran/skalanya wajib Amdal Listed in Lampiran I Mining >200 ha, Industry >10,000 m² Article 5(2)(a)
2.2 Location Based lokasi di dalam dan/atau berbatasan langsung dengan kawasan lindung Protected area proximity Near nature reserves, watershed areas Article 5(2)(b)

3.0 Environmental Quality Concepts: Pollution, Damage, and Standard Thresholds

Article 1(28) provides the legal definition of environmental pollution: "Pencemaran Lingkungan Hidup adalah masuk atau dimasukkannya makhluk hidup, zat, energi, dan/atau komponen lain ke dalam Lingkungan Hidup oleh kegiatan manusia sehingga melampaui baku mutu Lingkungan Hidup yang telah ditetapkan" (Environmental Pollution is the entry or introduction of living creatures, substances, energy, and/or other components into the Environment by human activities that exceed established environmental quality standards). This definition establishes a critical threshold: pollution occurs only when activities cause environmental quality to exceed "baku mutu" (quality standards). Emissions or discharges that remain within established quality standards do not constitute legal pollution, regardless of their environmental effect. This threshold-based approach shapes Indonesia's entire regulatory strategy—compliance means staying within numerical limits rather than eliminating all environmental impacts. Article 1(29) defines environmental damage as "perubahan langsung dan/atau tidak langsung terhadap sifat fisik, kimia, dan/atau hayati Lingkungan Hidup yang melampaui Kriteria Baku Kerusakan Lingkungan Hidup" (direct and/or indirect change to the physical, chemical, and/or biological properties of the Environment that exceeds Environmental Damage Standard Criteria). The distinction between "pencemaran" (pollution) and "kerusakan" (damage) is significant: pollution relates to the introduction of foreign elements, while damage relates to alteration of existing environmental characteristics. Both require exceeding established criteria before triggering regulatory consequences. The regulation establishes quality standards (baku mutu) for three environmental media. Article 1(38) defines "Baku Mutu Air" as "ukuran batas atau kadar makhluk hidup, zat, energi, atau komponen yang ada atau harus ada dan/atau unsur pencemar yang ditenggang keberadaannya di dalam air" (the limit or level of living creatures, substances, energy, or components that exist or should exist and/or polluting elements whose presence is tolerated in water). Similar definitions apply to ambient air quality (Baku Mutu Udara Ambien, Article 1(50)) and marine water quality (Baku Mutu Air Laut, Article 1(58)). The regulation also establishes emission standards (Baku Mutu Emisi) and wastewater standards (Baku Mutu Air Limbah) as discharge limits from specific sources (see Matrix 3.1 below).

Matrix 3.1: Environmental Quality Standard Categories

No. Standard Type Indonesian Term Definition Focus Applies To Article Reference
3.1 Water Quality Baku Mutu Air Limits in water bodies Rivers, lakes, groundwater Article 1(38)
3.2 Ambient Air Quality Baku Mutu Udara Ambien Pollutant limits in atmosphere Outdoor air quality Article 1(50)
3.3 Marine Water Quality Baku Mutu Air Laut Limits in marine waters Territorial sea, coastal Article 1(58)
3.4 Wastewater Baku Mutu Air Limbah Discharge limits Industrial, domestic effluent Article 1(41)
3.5 Emissions Baku Mutu Emisi Source limits Stacks, vents, process emissions Article 1(52)
3.6 Damage Criteria Kriteria Baku Kerusakan LH Physical/chemical/biological change limits Ecosystems, habitats Article 1(59)

4.0 Hazardous Materials Framework: B3 and B3 Waste Definitions

Article 1(67) defines B3 (Bahan Berbahaya dan Beracun) as "zat, energi, dan/atau komponen lain yang karena sifat, konsentrasi, dan/atau jumlahnya, baik secara langsung maupun tidak langsung, dapat mencemarkan dan/atau merusak Lingkungan Hidup, dan/atau membahayakan Lingkungan Hidup, kesehatan, serta kelangsungan hidup manusia dan makhluk hidup lain" (substances, energy, and/or other components which due to their properties, concentration, and/or quantity, either directly or indirectly, can pollute and/or damage the Environment, and/or endanger the Environment, health, and the survival of humans and other living creatures). This broad definition captures materials based on their hazard potential rather than a closed list, allowing regulatory coverage of emerging substances. The definition's three-factor test—properties, concentration, and quantity—means that even common materials may qualify as B3 when present in hazardous concentrations. Article 1(69) defines Limbah B3 (B3 Waste) as "sisa suatu usaha dan/atau kegiatan yang mengandung B3" (residue from a business and/or activity that contains B3). The distinction between B3 (hazardous materials in use) and Limbah B3 (hazardous waste to be managed) triggers different regulatory obligations. Materials management focuses on safe handling during production processes, while waste management encompasses the full lifecycle from generation through final disposal. Article 1(78) defines Pengelolaan Limbah B3 (B3 Waste Management) as "kegiatan yang meliputi pengurangan, penyimpanan, pengumpulan, pengangkutan, pemanfaatan, pengolahan, dan/atau penimbunan" (activities covering reduction, storage, collection, transportation, utilization, treatment, and/or disposal). This seven-element definition establishes distinct compliance categories—a business may require different permits for each management activity it performs. The regulation further distinguishes between waste generators (Penghasil Limbah B3, Article 1(70)), collectors (Pengumpul Limbah B3, Article 1(71)), transporters (Pengangkut Limbah B3, Article 1(74)), utilizers (Pemanfaat Limbah B3, Article 1(72)), treaters (Pengolah Limbah B3, Article 1(73)), and disposers (Penimbun Limbah B3, Article 1(86)). Each category carries specific licensing requirements and operational standards (see Matrix 4.1 below).

Matrix 4.1: B3 Waste Management Actor Categories

No. Actor Category Indonesian Term Role Definition Required Permit Article Reference
4.1 Waste Generator Penghasil Limbah B3 Produces B3 waste from business activities Environmental Approval Article 1(70)
4.2 Collector Pengumpul Limbah B3 Gathers waste from generators Collection Permit Article 1(71)
4.3 Transporter Pengangkut Limbah B3 Moves waste between locations Transport Permit Article 1(74)
4.4 Utilizer Pemanfaat Limbah B3 Reuses, recycles, or recovers waste Utilization Permit Article 1(72)
4.5 Treater Pengolah Limbah B3 Reduces hazardous/toxic properties Treatment Permit Article 1(73)
4.6 Disposer Penimbun Limbah B3 Performs final disposal/landfilling Disposal Permit Article 1(86)

Matrix 4.2: Seven Elements of B3 Waste Management

No. Management Element Indonesian Term Activity Description Regulatory Focus Article Reference
4.1 Reduction Pengurangan Minimizing waste generation at source Prevention priority Article 1(80)
4.2 Storage Penyimpanan Temporary holding at generator site Time limits, facility standards Article 1(81)
4.3 Collection Pengumpulan Aggregating from multiple generators Licensed facilities only Article 1(82)
4.4 Transportation Pengangkutan Movement via road, rail, ship, air Manifest requirements Article 1(83)
4.5 Utilization Pemanfaatan Reuse, recycling, recovery Substitution criteria Article 1(84)
4.6 Treatment Pengolahan Hazard reduction processes Technology standards Article 1(85)
4.7 Disposal Penimbunan Final secure landfilling Facility specifications Article 1(91)

5.0 Authority Structure and Enforcement Framework

The regulation establishes a hierarchical authority structure involving three government levels. Article 1(100) defines Pemerintah Pusat (Central Government) as "Presiden Republik Indonesia yang memegang kekuasaan pemerintahan Negara Republik Indonesia yang dibantu oleh Wakil Presiden dan menteri" (the President of the Republic of Indonesia who holds governmental power assisted by the Vice President and ministers). For environmental matters, Article 1(103) specifies that "Menteri" refers to "menteri yang menyelenggarakan urusan pemerintahan di bidang Perlindungan dan Pengelolaan Lingkungan Hidup" (the minister who administers governmental affairs in Environmental Protection and Management)—currently the Minister of Environment and Forestry. Article 1(102) defines Pemerintah Daerah (Regional Government) as "kepala daerah sebagai unsur penyelenggara pemerintahan daerah yang memimpin pelaksanaan urusan pemerintahan yang menjadi kewenangan daerah otonom" (the regional head as an element of regional government who leads implementation of governmental affairs under autonomous regional authority). This includes both provincial governors (gubernur) and regency/municipal heads (bupati/wali kota). Authority allocation between these levels follows location-based and sector-based criteria established in subsequent chapters and technical annexes. The enforcement framework centers on Sanksi Administratif (Administrative Sanctions) defined in Article 1(99) as "perangkat sarana hukum administrasi yang bersifat pembebanan kewajiban/perintah dan/atau penarikan kembali keputusan tata usaha negara" (administrative legal instruments that impose obligations/orders and/or withdraw state administrative decisions). Administrative sanctions operate independently of criminal prosecution, allowing rapid government response to violations. The Pejabat Pengawas Lingkungan Hidup (Environmental Inspector Officials), defined in Article 1(97), are civil servants with authority "untuk melakukan Pengawasan dan/atau penegakan hukum Lingkungan Hidup" (to conduct Supervision and/or environmental law enforcement). These officials conduct inspections, determine compliance status, and initiate enforcement actions (see Matrix 5.1 below).

Matrix 5.1: Authority Level Hierarchy

No. Authority Level Indonesian Term Scope Key Representatives Article Reference
5.1 Central Government Pemerintah Pusat National scope, cross-provincial President, Ministers Article 1(100)
5.2 Provincial Government Pemerintah Provinsi Provincial scope Governor (Gubernur) Article 1(102)
5.3 Regency/Municipal Government Pemerintah Kabupaten/Kota Local scope Bupati/Wali Kota Article 1(102)
5.4 Environmental Ministry Menteri LHK Sector authority Minister of Environment Article 1(103)

Matrix 5.2: Enforcement Mechanism Overview

No. Enforcement Element Indonesian Term Function Legal Basis Article Reference
5.1 Environmental Supervision Pengawasan Compliance monitoring Direct/indirect inspection Article 1(98)
5.2 Environmental Inspectors Pejabat Pengawas LH Enforcement officials Civil servant authority Article 1(97)
5.3 Administrative Sanctions Sanksi Administratif Penalty imposition BAB X provisions Article 1(99)
5.4 Business License Integration Perizinan Berusaha Permit conditions OSS system Article 1(3)

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PP 22/2021 Environmental Law Analysis Series

This is Article 1 of 157 in our comprehensive analysis of Indonesia's environmental protection framework.

Related Articles:
- AMDAL - When is Environmental Impact Assessment Required?
- UKL-UPL - Criteria & Applicability
- SPPL - Requirements for Low-Impact Activities
- Environmental Permit Types & Hierarchy


Regulation Reference

Full Citation:
Peraturan Pemerintah Republik Indonesia Nomor 22 Tahun 2021 tentang Penyelenggaraan Perlindungan dan Pengelolaan Lingkungan Hidup

English Translation:
Government Regulation of the Republic of Indonesia Number 22 of 2021 on the Implementation of Environmental Protection and Management

Short Citation:
PP 22/2021

Enacted Date: February 2, 2021
Effective Date: February 2, 2021
Official Gazette: Lembaran Negara Republik Indonesia Tahun 2021 Nomor 32

Official Source: BPK JDIH


Legal Analysis by the CRPG Environmental Law Team | Analysis Date: December 14, 2025 | Regulation Effective: February 2, 2021

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, legal opinion, or professional consultation. The analysis presented herein is based on the authors' interpretation of PP 22/2021 and related regulations as of the publication date and may contain errors, omissions, or inaccuracies despite reasonable efforts to ensure accuracy. Laws and regulations are subject to amendment, judicial interpretation, and administrative clarification that may affect the applicability or interpretation of the provisions discussed. This article does not create an attorney-client relationship between the authors, the Center for Regulation, Policy and Governance (CRPG), and any reader. Readers should not act or refrain from acting based solely on the information contained in this article without seeking appropriate legal counsel from qualified Indonesian legal practitioners licensed to practice environmental law. The application of environmental approval requirements depends on specific factual circumstances including project location, business sector classification, activity scale, environmental impact assessment, protected area proximity, and B3 material involvement, all of which require case-specific legal analysis. Neither the authors nor CRPG assume any liability for actions taken or not taken based on information in this article, nor for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, or punitive damages arising from use of or reliance on this material. For specific legal guidance on environmental compliance requirements, consult with qualified legal counsel familiar with Indonesian environmental and administrative law and current regulatory practice.


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