225 Hotspots Detected in Indonesia in the Last 24 Hours (Tuesday, November 11, 2025)
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Based on the SiPongi forest and land fire monitoring system of the Ministry of Environment and Forestry (KLHK), monitoring in the last 24 hours shows that 225 hotspots were detected in Indonesia.
This data is the result of satellite imagery from Terra/Aqua, SNPP, and NOAA, accessed on Tuesday (November 11, 2025) at 11:53 AM WIB. Of the 225 detected hotspots, 1 point had a high confidence level, 218 points were at a medium scale, and 6 points were at a low scale.
Hotspot confidence levels are divided into 3 scales. The low scale ranges from 0 - 29, the medium scale from 30 - 79, and the high scale from 80 - 100. The higher the hotspot confidence level, the higher the likelihood of forest and land fires occurring in a particular area.
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The most detected hotspots were in Riau with 107 points. West Kalimantan ranked second with 41 hotspots. East Kalimantan was in third place with 21 hotspots.
As many as 10 hotspots were detected in East Nusa Tenggara, followed by West Sumatra with 7 hotspots, and Maluku and Jambi each having 7 and 6 detected hotspots.
A hotspot is a coordinate point of an area that has a higher surface temperature compared to its surroundings, and not the number of forest and land fire incidents.
However, a large number of clustered hotspots in an area indicates the occurrence of forest and land fires. This means that hotspot data detected by remote sensing satellites is still the most effective in monitoring forest and land fires for large areas.
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