Causal Attribution of Coastal Water Clarity Degradation to Nickel Processing Expansion at the Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park, Sulawesi
Abstract
Indonesia's nickel ore export ban has driven rapid expansion of smelting and hydrometallurgical processing capacity at the Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park (IMIP), now the world's largest integrated nickel processing complex, on the coast of Central Sulawesi. Whether this industrialization has degraded the adjacent marine environment remains unquantified. We apply Bayesian structural time-series (BSTS) causal inference to a multi-decadal, multi-sensor satellite ocean color record of the diffuse attenuation coefficient at 490 nm, K_d(490), to test for a causal link between IMIP expansion and nearshore turbidity change. A consensus structural breakpoint, a significant posterior causal effect estimated against a Banda Sea counterfactual, and a distribution-free placebo rank test collectively establish that coastal water clarity deteriorated after the transition from initial nickel pig iron production to hyper-expansion of high-pressure acid leaching facilities for battery-grade nickel. Satellite-derived land cover analysis independently corroborates this timing, showing substantial built-area growth and concurrent tree cover loss within the IMIP footprint. The resulting euphotic zone shoaling occurs in oligotrophic waters supporting high marine biodiversity, where even moderate optical degradation may impair coral photosynthesis and compress depth-dependent reef habitat. These findings quantify a marine environmental cost absent from Indonesia's mineral downstreaming policy discourse and demonstrate a transferable, satellite-based quasi-experimental framework for causal impact assessment at coastal industrial sites in data-limited tropical settings.
Community
The global push for electric vehicles carries a hidden environmental cost, and a compelling new study leverages satellite data to finally quantify its impact on vulnerable marine ecosystems. Researchers investigated the coastal waters adjacent to the Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park, the world's largest integrated nickel processing complex. By applying Bayesian structural time-series causal inference to a multi-decadal record of ocean color satellite data, they detected a statistically significant degradation in nearshore water clarity. The study pinpoints a structural breakpoint in May 2019, aligning precisely with the site's aggressive expansion of high-pressure acid leaching facilities designed to produce battery-grade nickel. This localized industrialization caused the photic zone to shoal by 12.3 meters in the highly biodiverse Coral Triangle , providing a crucial, quasi-experimental framework to expose the unmeasured marine externalities of the green energy transition.
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