Immigration can hardly keep up with the 
massive amount of people coming through Bali Ngurah Rai International 
Airport everyday, so plans to install some autogates are in the works.
The government has been pushing so hard to get foreign arrivals up, with the aim of meeting ambitious annual targets, but the island’s infrastructure isn’t moving quite as quickly.
In the past two months—no doubt, peak 
season in Bali—as many as 17,000 foreign travelers are coming through 
the airport a day, according to head of Immigration Class I Ngurah Rai, 
Ari Budijanto. 
Making it even harder on Immigration 
staff is that flights often land close together, with waves of travelers
 coming in at around the same time. 
“The problem is the arrivals are not spread out, but occur only at certain hours,” Budijanto told Tribun Bali on Tuesday. 
For instance, from around 9-11am, around 10 aircraft carrying about 3,500 passengers arrive. 
And increasing the amount of people even 
more is that plans are getting bigger. The average flight used to 
contain 150 passengers, but now wide-body aircraft carry around 300-350 
passengers, significantly increasing the volume of people arriving in 
Bali at one time, says Budijanto. 

“Not to mention in the afternoon from 3pm
 to 5pm, about 15 wide-bodied aircraft plus charter planes, about 19-20 
aircraft come in. Imagine, within two hours, our officers must conduct 
checks on 4,500 foreigners,” Budjianto added. 
There are currently 26 Immigration 
counters at Ngurah Rai Airport, broken down into 13 counters at arrivals
 and 13 at departures. Each counter has two Immigration officials, 
according to Budijanto. 
To better deal with the heavy flows of 
foreigners coming through Immigration, Budijanto says he hopes automated
 gates can be installed. 
“Hopefully by the end of the year, the autogates can be procured, so as early as 2018 they can be in use,” Budijanto said. 
As with every big project in Bali, like the underpass meant to be dug out from under the roundabout in front of the airport, the big eyesore sculpture construction at GWK, and the cruise ship terminal in Benoa, the hope is the autogate will be ready for the 2018 IMF and World Bank meeting set for Oct. 2018. 
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