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Climate Change
and Disaster Management



        Prof. David Alexander
        Global Risk Forum - Davos
Climate change effects
Anticipated climate change effects:-
                            effects:-

• major population increases at coasts
  with rising sea level and land loss
• more extreme physical forces lead
  to more frequent and intense floods,
  hurricanes, landslides, tornadoes...
• major changes in food chain:
                          chain:
  crop production, soil erosion, etc.
• disease reservoirs change geographically
• less available coastal land.
                         land.
Wind speed and hurricane damage are
non-linearly related: small increases in wind
speed can lead to huge increases in damage
What does the old magnitude-frequency
  rule mean in real-life situations?
Magnitude




            Logarithm of    Frequency   Magnitude
            return period
Risk: value of probable costs and losses
                                            Falling hazard                         Rising vulnerability


   Hazard: probability of occurrence
                                           with diminishing                      Y
                                                                              IT


    Vulnerability: potential damage
                                            probability of                B IL with increasing
                                                                       RA          seriousness of
                                              occurrence             E
                                                                  LN               potential
          Vertical axis scales:

                                                              V U
                                                                                   consequences




                                            HA
                                              ZA




                                                                  RIS
                                                RD




                                                                     K
                                                                          Risk as product
                                                                          of hazard and
                  :




                                                                          vulnerability
                                                                         Total annual
           :




                                                                         predicted
                                                                         costs and losses
    :




                                                 Severity
                                                                     Fat-tailed
                                                                     distribution
FREQUENCY      HAZARD




                              RISK
            MAGNITUDE                VULNERABILITY

                                     Catastrophist
                                       viewpoint
RISK




                              RISK
             Uniformitatian
               viewpoint


             HAZARD                     HAZARD
Hazard or risk
                                                            amplified




                                      Arbitrarily defined
                                      disaster threshold
                                                            by lack of
                                                            mitigation
FREQUENCY OF HAZARD


                                                            Frequency /
                                                            impact level
     RISK (R) OR




                                                            Hazard or risk
                                                            mitigated




                      VULNERABILITY (V) OR IMPACT LEVEL
World Vulnerability
  to Disasters
Courtesy of Dr Terry Cannon
Courtesy of Dr Terry Cannon
Imbalances




     Population
   Wealth
 Poverty
Land area
Priorities?




              Source: news.bbc.co.uk
Katrina:
an emergency
management
dêbacle
HURRICANE KATRINA
A balance sheet computed with hindsight:-
                                  hindsight:
          • impact scenarios ignored
           • forecasts shrugged off
    • wind loading factors not taken into
   account sufficiently in structural design
• reliance on fallible structural protection
         • inadequate emergency plan
            • inadequate evacuation
            planning and management
  • slow and inefficient Federal response
• Hurricane Ivan lessons not implemented.
                               implemented.
A "classquake"
Squatter settlement
in Bangladesh                    Flood level


 Normal river level

  Rather than mitigating the sources of
 vulnerability to disaster, globalisation is
   maintaining, exporting and reinforcing
  them by its divide-and-rule strategies
Disaster risk and poverty
Disaster risk and other risk:-
• Intensive risk: high concentration
  of mortality and disaster losses
• Extensive risk: geographic dispersal
  of population to low-intensity risk
• Everyday risk: crime, political
  violence, food insecurity, pollution,
  lack of clean water and sanitation
• Poverty: relative and absolute,
  leading to marginalisation
• Poverty and vulnerability are
  almost (but not quite) synonymous.
A double standard: $3,500,000,000 to
  save hedge funds, $100,000,000 to
  save the victims of Hurricane Mitch
In 2005 the rich
                        countries donated
                        $4.5 billion to the
                        countries affected
                        by the Indian
                        Ocean tsunami

  At the same time,
   the U.N. was not
        able to raise
 $30 million for the
major crisis in Dafur
Total:
                Total: life is
Newly             generally
generated:
generated:       precarious      Economic:
                                 Economic:
caused by                        people lack
changes in                       adequate
circumstances                    occupation
                Vulnerability   Technological
Delinquent:
Delinquent:                     technocratic:
                                technocratic:
caused by                       caused by
corruption,
corruption,                     the riskiness
negligence, Residual:
negligence, Residual: caused by of technology
etc.      lack of modernisation
Disaster Management
in a Changing World
The components of risk
                          Magnitude
Physical disaster         Frequency
                          Duration
                          Location of hazard
             Exposition
                          Environment
                          Lifestyle and earnings
Human         Resistance
                         Health
vulnerability
                         Adjustments
             Resilience   Risk reduction activities
                          Preparations for disaster
                                             After Ian Davis (2005)
Hazard x Vulnerability x Exposure
       = Risk → Disaster




  Hazard x WASTE x Exposure
       = Risk → Disaster
Trends in disaster losses are unsustainable.
  Over the period 1950-2000 the world
             saw increases of:
• 250% in the number of recorded disasters
• 500% in number of disasters with victims
• 500% in the number of affected people
                                      100
• 1500% in the total                  80
                                                                                               152 bn US$




  cost of disasters    U.S$ billion   60


• 1640% in the cost                   40



  of insured damage.                  20

                                       0
                                            1950   1955   1960    1965   1970   1975   1980   1985   1990   1995   2000

                                                                 Economic losses in disasters
Then (1950s)            Now (2011)
Under-reporting of     More complete
disasters              recording
Counting only direct   Quantifying indirect
effects                effects
Smaller population of  Larger population,
hazardous places       greater densities
Less inequality        Growing inequality and
                       marginalisation
Less fixed capital at  Relentless accumulation
risk                   of fixed capital
Simpler socio-economic More complex networks
networks
Evolving                                 Large
strategic                              technological
situation                                hazards
            Instability    Complex
             threats       hazards
                                         'Na-
                                         'Na-tech'
                 Civil Defence            (hybrid)
                Civil Protection          hazards
          Enhanced           Natural
       natural hazards       hazards
Evolving                                  Major
climate                                 geophysical
change                                    events
Armed aggression
 on the part of states       Natural disasters

   Civil defence           Civil protection




"Homeland security"      "Civil contingencies"
  (civil defence)             (resilience)
   Armed aggression
                           "Generic" disasters
     on the part of
  groups of dissidents
Natural           Anthropogenic
                  Techno-               Inten-
       Natural               Social
                   logical              tional
      disasters             disasters
                  disasters           disasters

                                                Civil
                                             defence
Civil
protection
"Civil
 contingencies"
                                         "Homeland
                                           Security"
"Civil        Civil
 contingencies" protection        The
 management                     security
                                industry
                Emergencies
               and disasters

"Homeland                        Business
 security"                      continuity
                 Complex       management
               emergencies
Civil protection:
                        protection:
 What are the what degree of          What role for
 limits of civil political support?   the security
 contingencies                         industry in
 management?
 management?                           the general
                                       emergency?

                    Emergencies
    Homeland       and disasters
                                            What
    security:
    security:
                                         relationship
  is reduction
                                         of business
in civil liberties
                                          continuity
  acceptable?
                 Complex emergencies:
                          emergencies:   management
                   How much aid from      with civil
                    donor countries?     authorities?
Hazard
                    monitoring &
 Disaster           forecasting
management
             Policies
  Major      Plans        Human &
 incident    Procedures    material
management   Protocols    resources
 Incident
management
                     Population
                    (community)
                     protection
Resilience and
Sustainability
An asset is not            A hazard is not
vulnerable unless           hazardous unless
it is threatened Resilience   it threatens
  by something                  something




  Hazard       RISK           Vulnerability
Extreme                           Elements
 events                            at risk


                 Exposure
Knowledge
                       Knowledge of
    of hazards
                        community
     and their
                        vulerability
      impacts
                 DRR
              Knowledge
               of coping
Disaster     capacity and
  Risk        resilience
Reduction
Population
                (community)       Plans,
                 protection    procedures,
                                protocols

               Disaster risk
                 reduction
  Hazard
forecasting,                      Human
 monitoring,     Incident      and material
    etc.        management      resources
needs to be                   needs to be shortened
 lengthened




preparation
                                       repair of
for the     warning        Emergency     basic
next event                management               Reconstruction
                                        services
                 impact




        Sustainable reduction
          of risks and impacts
Sustainable emergency management:-
                        management:-

• is centred upon the local level
  (but is harmonised from above)
                           above)
• has the support and
  involvement of the population
• is based on plans that are fully
  disseminated and frequently revised
• is a fundamental, every-day service
                    every-
  for the population and is taken seriously.
                                  seriously.
Attitude:
• positive outlook
                          RESILIENCE
• ingenious approaches
• searching for solutions
• involving other people
                 Redundancy
                 • expensive but worthwhile
                 • alternative solutions
Preparedness: • extra capacity
• emergency plans
• monitoring & forecasting
• warning & evacuation
• public information
-
negative
           Risk perception
               factors       +
                             positive
                Total
            vulnerability

      Risk DIALECTIC Risk
  amplification     mitigation
    factors          factors
Mitigation                 Preparation
     and risk                      and
    reduction                    warning

                 Linkages

  Recovery
                            Emergency
     and
                              action
reconstruction
              Integration
            through planning
              and training
Global drivers
                                e.g. weak governance

                                          Underlying
                                         risk drivers
                                      e.g. vulnerability


                            Poverty
                                       Everyday risk
                                                                        Intensive risk


                                                       Extensive risk




Disaster risk and poverty



                             Poverty                    Disaster
                            outcomes                    impacts
Conclusions: what we need:
• governance: the action or
  governance:
  manner of governing (OED)
• participatory democracy and using
  the concept of stakeholders
• transparency, freedom from corruption,
  transparency,
economic probity and good government
• the importance of protecting livelihoods
• linking the disaster risk reduction agenda
  to the climate change adaptation one.
                                     one.
The disaster manager needs...

• to have a political profile
• to be adaptable to rapid and
  profound changes in political
  priorities, environmental and
  demographic circumstances
• to monitor the climate change
  agenda, science and debate
• to ensure that his or her
  programmes are sustainable.
                   sustainable.
Thank you
 for your
attention!

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Climate Change and Disaster Management

  • 1. Climate Change and Disaster Management Prof. David Alexander Global Risk Forum - Davos
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6. Anticipated climate change effects:- effects:- • major population increases at coasts with rising sea level and land loss • more extreme physical forces lead to more frequent and intense floods, hurricanes, landslides, tornadoes... • major changes in food chain: chain: crop production, soil erosion, etc. • disease reservoirs change geographically • less available coastal land. land.
  • 7. Wind speed and hurricane damage are non-linearly related: small increases in wind speed can lead to huge increases in damage
  • 8. What does the old magnitude-frequency rule mean in real-life situations? Magnitude Logarithm of Frequency Magnitude return period
  • 9. Risk: value of probable costs and losses Falling hazard Rising vulnerability Hazard: probability of occurrence with diminishing Y IT Vulnerability: potential damage probability of B IL with increasing RA seriousness of occurrence E LN potential Vertical axis scales: V U consequences HA ZA RIS RD K Risk as product of hazard and : vulnerability Total annual : predicted costs and losses : Severity Fat-tailed distribution
  • 10. FREQUENCY HAZARD RISK MAGNITUDE VULNERABILITY Catastrophist viewpoint RISK RISK Uniformitatian viewpoint HAZARD HAZARD
  • 11. Hazard or risk amplified Arbitrarily defined disaster threshold by lack of mitigation FREQUENCY OF HAZARD Frequency / impact level RISK (R) OR Hazard or risk mitigated VULNERABILITY (V) OR IMPACT LEVEL
  • 12. World Vulnerability to Disasters
  • 13. Courtesy of Dr Terry Cannon
  • 14. Courtesy of Dr Terry Cannon
  • 15. Imbalances Population Wealth Poverty Land area
  • 16. Priorities? Source: news.bbc.co.uk
  • 18. HURRICANE KATRINA A balance sheet computed with hindsight:- hindsight: • impact scenarios ignored • forecasts shrugged off • wind loading factors not taken into account sufficiently in structural design • reliance on fallible structural protection • inadequate emergency plan • inadequate evacuation planning and management • slow and inefficient Federal response • Hurricane Ivan lessons not implemented. implemented.
  • 20.
  • 21. Squatter settlement in Bangladesh Flood level Normal river level Rather than mitigating the sources of vulnerability to disaster, globalisation is maintaining, exporting and reinforcing them by its divide-and-rule strategies
  • 22. Disaster risk and poverty
  • 23. Disaster risk and other risk:- • Intensive risk: high concentration of mortality and disaster losses • Extensive risk: geographic dispersal of population to low-intensity risk • Everyday risk: crime, political violence, food insecurity, pollution, lack of clean water and sanitation • Poverty: relative and absolute, leading to marginalisation • Poverty and vulnerability are almost (but not quite) synonymous.
  • 24. A double standard: $3,500,000,000 to save hedge funds, $100,000,000 to save the victims of Hurricane Mitch
  • 25. In 2005 the rich countries donated $4.5 billion to the countries affected by the Indian Ocean tsunami At the same time, the U.N. was not able to raise $30 million for the major crisis in Dafur
  • 26. Total: Total: life is Newly generally generated: generated: precarious Economic: Economic: caused by people lack changes in adequate circumstances occupation Vulnerability Technological Delinquent: Delinquent: technocratic: technocratic: caused by caused by corruption, corruption, the riskiness negligence, Residual: negligence, Residual: caused by of technology etc. lack of modernisation
  • 27. Disaster Management in a Changing World
  • 28. The components of risk Magnitude Physical disaster Frequency Duration Location of hazard Exposition Environment Lifestyle and earnings Human Resistance Health vulnerability Adjustments Resilience Risk reduction activities Preparations for disaster After Ian Davis (2005)
  • 29. Hazard x Vulnerability x Exposure = Risk → Disaster Hazard x WASTE x Exposure = Risk → Disaster
  • 30. Trends in disaster losses are unsustainable. Over the period 1950-2000 the world saw increases of: • 250% in the number of recorded disasters • 500% in number of disasters with victims • 500% in the number of affected people 100 • 1500% in the total 80 152 bn US$ cost of disasters U.S$ billion 60 • 1640% in the cost 40 of insured damage. 20 0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Economic losses in disasters
  • 31. Then (1950s) Now (2011) Under-reporting of More complete disasters recording Counting only direct Quantifying indirect effects effects Smaller population of Larger population, hazardous places greater densities Less inequality Growing inequality and marginalisation Less fixed capital at Relentless accumulation risk of fixed capital Simpler socio-economic More complex networks networks
  • 32. Evolving Large strategic technological situation hazards Instability Complex threats hazards 'Na- 'Na-tech' Civil Defence (hybrid) Civil Protection hazards Enhanced Natural natural hazards hazards Evolving Major climate geophysical change events
  • 33. Armed aggression on the part of states Natural disasters Civil defence Civil protection "Homeland security" "Civil contingencies" (civil defence) (resilience) Armed aggression "Generic" disasters on the part of groups of dissidents
  • 34. Natural Anthropogenic Techno- Inten- Natural Social logical tional disasters disasters disasters disasters Civil defence Civil protection "Civil contingencies" "Homeland Security"
  • 35. "Civil Civil contingencies" protection The management security industry Emergencies and disasters "Homeland Business security" continuity Complex management emergencies
  • 36. Civil protection: protection: What are the what degree of What role for limits of civil political support? the security contingencies industry in management? management? the general emergency? Emergencies Homeland and disasters What security: security: relationship is reduction of business in civil liberties continuity acceptable? Complex emergencies: emergencies: management How much aid from with civil donor countries? authorities?
  • 37. Hazard monitoring & Disaster forecasting management Policies Major Plans Human & incident Procedures material management Protocols resources Incident management Population (community) protection
  • 39. An asset is not A hazard is not vulnerable unless hazardous unless it is threatened Resilience it threatens by something something Hazard RISK Vulnerability Extreme Elements events at risk Exposure
  • 40. Knowledge Knowledge of of hazards community and their vulerability impacts DRR Knowledge of coping Disaster capacity and Risk resilience Reduction
  • 41. Population (community) Plans, protection procedures, protocols Disaster risk reduction Hazard forecasting, Human monitoring, Incident and material etc. management resources
  • 42. needs to be needs to be shortened lengthened preparation repair of for the warning Emergency basic next event management Reconstruction services impact Sustainable reduction of risks and impacts
  • 43. Sustainable emergency management:- management:- • is centred upon the local level (but is harmonised from above) above) • has the support and involvement of the population • is based on plans that are fully disseminated and frequently revised • is a fundamental, every-day service every- for the population and is taken seriously. seriously.
  • 44. Attitude: • positive outlook RESILIENCE • ingenious approaches • searching for solutions • involving other people Redundancy • expensive but worthwhile • alternative solutions Preparedness: • extra capacity • emergency plans • monitoring & forecasting • warning & evacuation • public information
  • 45. - negative Risk perception factors + positive Total vulnerability Risk DIALECTIC Risk amplification mitigation factors factors
  • 46. Mitigation Preparation and risk and reduction warning Linkages Recovery Emergency and action reconstruction Integration through planning and training
  • 47. Global drivers e.g. weak governance Underlying risk drivers e.g. vulnerability Poverty Everyday risk Intensive risk Extensive risk Disaster risk and poverty Poverty Disaster outcomes impacts
  • 48.
  • 49. Conclusions: what we need: • governance: the action or governance: manner of governing (OED) • participatory democracy and using the concept of stakeholders • transparency, freedom from corruption, transparency, economic probity and good government • the importance of protecting livelihoods • linking the disaster risk reduction agenda to the climate change adaptation one. one.
  • 50. The disaster manager needs... • to have a political profile • to be adaptable to rapid and profound changes in political priorities, environmental and demographic circumstances • to monitor the climate change agenda, science and debate • to ensure that his or her programmes are sustainable. sustainable.
  • 51. Thank you for your attention!