YOGYAKARTA — A lecturer and
researcher at UIN Sunan Kalijaga has published a Q1 Scopus-indexed
international journal study warning that weak safety standards and inadequate
environmental governance are placing visitors and fragile ecosystems at risk
across Indonesia’s karst cave tourism sector.
The research was conducted by Trio
Yonathan Teja Kusuma, a lecturer in Industrial Engineering at the
university’s Faculty of Science and Technology. The study focuses on the
development of a sustainable geotourism management model based on
macro-ergonomics, using Gua Jomblang in Gunungkidul, Yogyakarta, as a
case study.
The study highlights a growing
number of accidents at natural tourism sites across Indonesia in recent years,
including falls, lost visitors and incidents linked to inadequate safety
procedures. These cases, the research notes, point to broader weaknesses in
governance, risk mitigation and operational preparedness at tourism
destinations.
Uncontrolled tourism development has
also intensified environmental degradation in karst areas, including declining
water quality, increasing waste, loss of vegetation and damage to landscapes
caused by mass tourism. Weak oversight, fragmented policy implementation and
limited awareness of the restricted carrying capacity of karst ecosystems have
further worsened the situation.
Indonesia has around 154,000 square
kilometers of karst landscapes — the largest in Southeast Asia — and more than
2,700 cave entrances with high scientific, ecological, geological and aesthetic
value. However, many of these sites still lack adequate conservation standards
and comprehensive safety systems.
Kusuma’s research finds that
conventional tourism management frameworks, such as the widely used “4A”
concept — attraction, accessibility, amenities and ancillary services — are no
longer sufficient to address the complexity and vulnerability of karst
environments. The study argues that karst tourism requires management models
that are measurable, adaptive and conservation-oriented.
The core contribution of the
research is a geotourism management model that integrates three strategic
pillars — geoconservation, geoeducation and the socio-economic empowerment of
local communities — with the concept of a Memorable Tourism Experience (MTE).
Under this framework, tourism experiences must prioritize safety, enjoyment and
education while avoiding environmental damage.
Field observations at Gua Jomblang
identified common challenges at karst destinations nationwide, including waste
accumulation, damage to rock formations, microclimate changes and uncontrolled
seasonal tourism pressure. The proposed model was developed through
participatory ergonomics, involving site managers, guides, tourists and local
communities, and produced practical strategies such as standardized safety
procedures, cave monitoring systems and spatial zoning.
“The success of karst geotourism
depends on creating experiences that are safe, enjoyable and informative
without sacrificing environmental preservation,” Kusuma said. “Karst cave
ecosystems are extremely fragile. Once damaged, recovery is almost impossible.”
The study is expected to inform
policymakers, destination managers and tourism stakeholders in developing safer
and more sustainable karst tourism management across Indonesia.