Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

INSIGHTS ON DISASTER RESILIENCE FROM 2008’S DISASTERS AND DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIOS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "INSIGHTS ON DISASTER RESILIENCE FROM 2008’S DISASTERS AND DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIOS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 INSIGHTS ON DISASTER RESILIENCE FROM 2008’S DISASTERS AND DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIOS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA

3 SEVEN TYPES OF NOTABLE DISASTERS AND THE CALIFORNIA SHAKEOUT EARTHQUAKE SCENARIOS 2008

4 NOTABLE DISASTERS IN 2008 CYCLONE NARGIS WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE FLOODING IN MIDWESTERN USA TROPICAL STORMS AND HURRICANES WILDFIRES IN CALIFORNIA ERUPTION OF VOLCANO CHAITEN CATALYSTS FOR CHANGE NEW KNOWLEDGE FOR COMMUNITY DISASTER RESILIENCE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE

5 MAIN IDEA Each disaster provides deeper insights on: 1) Protection, 2) Preparedness, 3) Early Warning, 4) Emergency Response, and 5) Recovery and Reconstruction

6 BOOK OF BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE - Perspectives KNOWLEDGE - Perspectives On Science, Policy, On Science, Policy, And DISASTER And DISASTERRESILIENCE

7 GOAL: COMMUNITY DISASTER RESILIENCE FLOODS SEVERE WIND STORMS EARTHQUAKES DROUGHTS LANDSLIDES WILDFIRES VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS TECHNOLOGICAL HAZARDS GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE TERRORISM INCREASED TECHNICAL AND POLITICL CAPACITY OF COMMUNITY TO COPE INCREASED OWNERSHIP AND USE OF KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE IMPROVE ON PAST PERFORMANCE

8 YOURCOMMUNITYYOURCOMMUNITY DATA BASES AND INFORMATION HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS HAZARDS INVENTORY VULNERABILITY LOCATION RISK ASSESSMENT RISK ACCEPTABLE RISK UNACCEPTABLE RISK GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCE PROTECTION PEPAREDNESS EARLY WARNING EMERGENCY RESPONSE RECOVERY/RECONSTRUCT. FIVE PILLARS OF RESILIENCE

9 QUICK REVIEWS

10 SEVEN NOTABLE TYPES OF DISASTERS DURING 2008 CYCLONE NARGIS, MYANMAR (BURMA), MAY 2-3

11 PATH OF CYCLONE NARGIS: WARNING IGNORED: MAY 2-3, 2008

12 CYCLONE NARGIS: People unprepared. The storm's 120 mph winds blew roofs off hospitals, downed trees, and cut electricity to the country's largest city, Rangon. Torrential rain caused local flooding.

13 Myanmar’s policies of self- sufficiency delayed entry of food and materials from all but a few countries, and usually without the skilled disaster workers.

14 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM CYCLONE NARGIS WHEN YOU HAVE EARLY WARNING, USE IT TO EVACUATE THE PEOPLE IN HARM’S WAY MORE LIVES ARE SAVED AND RECOVERY IS ACCELERATED WHEN YOU ARE PREPARED TO ACCEPT INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

15 SEVEN NOTABLE TYPES OF DISASTERS DURING 2008 VOLCANO CHAITEN (CHILE), MAY 3

16 AFTER 10,000 YEAR DORMANCY, CHAITEN ERUPTS IN CHILE

17 CHAITEN‘S ERUPTION CHANGED THE STATUS QUO PRESIDENT DECLARES STATE OF EMERGENCY 1500 EVACUATED DRINKING WATER CONTAMINATED

18 CHAITEN CAUSES SEA EVACUATIONS

19 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM VOLCANO CHAITEN EVACUATE THE PEOPLE IN HARM’S WAY WHEN YOU HAVE RELIABLE EARLY WARNING DON’T BECOME UN-PREPARED JUST BECAUSE NO ERUPTIONS HAVE HAPPENED FOR A LONG TIME, EVEN IF THE VOLCANO IS NOT IN YOUR COUNTRY

20 SEVEN NOTABLE DISASTERS DURING 2008 WENCHUAN, CHINA EARTH- QUAKE; MAY 12

21 WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE 88,000 DEAD 25 MILLIONS HOMES DAMAGED OR DESTROYED NO MODERN BUILDING CODE

22

23

24 45,690,000 people were affected by the disaster.

25 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE BUILDINGS COLLAPSE, INFRASTRUCTURE LOSES FUNCTION, LIVES ARE LOST, AND MONEY IS WASTED WHEN BUILDINGS AND INFRASTRUCTURE ARE NOT PROTECTED BY MODERN BUILDING CODES AND LIFELINE STANDARDS.

26 SEVEN TYPES OF NOTABLE DISASTERS DURING 2008 FLOODING IN MIDWEST USA, JUNE 5-16

27 AFFECTED MIDWESTERN STATES: JUNE 2008

28 Thousands Evacuated and Hundreds of Thousands Affected Few Deaths, but Losses Reach Billions 5-16 June 2008

29 FLOODED CORNFIELDS IN DECATUR, ILLINOIS; JUNE 5TH

30 ILLINOIS' LEVEE BREAKS: JUNE 10TH

31 SAND BAGS: CEDAR FALLS, IOWA; JUNE 11TH

32 UNUSUAL FLOODING IN IOWA: A “500 YEAR FLOOD” SITUATION DEVELOPED AS NINE IOWA RIVERS REACHED OR APPROACHED HISTORIC LEVELS.

33 FLOODING: CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA; JUNE 12TH

34 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM USA’S FLOODS MONITORING, EARLY WARNING, EVACUATION, AND WETLANDS, SANDBAGS, LEVEES, AND DAMS ARE VITAL FOR SAVING LIVES AND PROTECTING PROPERTY. BEING PREPARED INCLUDES CONSIDERATION OF POSSIBLE WATER-BORNE DISEASES

35 SEVEN TYPES OF NOTABLE DISASTERS DURING 2008 16 SEVERE WINDSTORMS IN ATLANTIC BASIN; 2008 SEASON

36

37 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM 2008’S SEVERE WINDSTORMS EARLY WARNING AND EVACUATION TO MOVE PEOPLE OUT OF HARM’S WAY ARE VITAL FOR SAVING LIVES WIND ENGINEERING PROTECTS PROPERTY INSURANCE SPREADS RISK

38 SEVEN NOTABLE TYPES OF DISASTERS CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES, JULY

39

40 t

41 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM CALIFORNIA’S WILDFIRES EARLY WARNING PROVIDES TIME TO EVACUATE THE PEOPLE WHO ARE IN HARM’S WAY POST-WILDFIRES SLOPES ARE SUSCEPTIBLE TO MUDFLOWS REGIONAL COOPERATION SPEEDS RESPONSE AND RECOVERY

42 SEVEN NOTABLE TYPES OF DISASTERS GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE, ONGOING

43 GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE: A DEVELOPING ISSUE Small European glaciers are melting. Larger glaciers, Greenland, and Antarctica are also melting, but much slower. Average global temperature is rising. Sea level is rising.

44 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE LONG-TERM MONITORING IS VITAL FOR UNDERSTANDING WHAT IS HAPPENING OVER TIME,AND WHY UNDERSTANDING IS THE KEY TO REALISTIC ADAPTATION TO THE CHANGES AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNOLOGIES AND POLICIES

45 CALIFORNIA EARTHQUAKE SHAKEOUT SCENARIOS NOVEMBER 2008

46 ADVANCE PLANNING SO THAT CALIFORNIA WILL BE READY WHEN THE INEVITABLE “BIG ONES” RECUR Source: US Geological Survey

47 THE GOAL: Identify the physical, social and economic conse- quences of major earthquakes in California, so that end users can identify what they can change now—before the earthquake —to avoid catastrophic impacts after the earthquake.

48

49 The Bay Area straddles the boundary between the North American and Pacific tectonic plates. Much of the stress release is on the San Andreas fault, but some of it is relieved by the Hayward fault and other smaller parallel faults.

50 A Hayward fault earthquake is likely to be one of the nation's biggest natural disasters. A Hayward fault quake damages homes, schools, senior centers, hospitals, businesses and the campus of UC Berkeley and impacts 7 million people.

51

52 A M7.0 earthquake on the Hayward fault will cause an estimated $210 billion dollars in damage.

53 The region's transportation infrastructure and water delivery systems will likely lose some or all of their function for days to weeks.

54

55 The M7.8 ShakeOut earthquake will cause about 1800 deaths and $213 billion losses. These numbers are as low as they are because of aggressive retrofitting programs for buildings and lifelines.

56 The estimates of about 1800 deaths and $213 billion of economic losses are as large as they are because much more retrofitting can still be done.

57 MAIN INSIGHTS FROM THE CA EARTHQUAKE SCENARIOS DISASTER PLANNING IS INCOMPLETE WITHOUT REALISTIC INTEGRATION OF THE PAST WITH THE PRESENT


Download ppt "INSIGHTS ON DISASTER RESILIENCE FROM 2008’S DISASTERS AND DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIOS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google