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Regional
Training Workshop on Climate Information Applications
At the August 2001
meeting of the ASEAN Sub-Committee on Meteorology and
Geophysics, members discussed various initiatives to strengthen
ASEAN regional capacity in seasonal climate prediction.
The meeting also recognized the importance of promoting
the application of climate information for societal benefit.
As a follow-on to these discussions, a training workshop
on climate information applications is being organized
jointly by the Thai Meteorological Department (TMD) and
ADPC, in association with the East-West Center and the
International Research Institute for Climate Prediction
(IRI). The Asian Climate Training (ACT) Workshop is funded
by NOAA-OGP, and will further develop the curriculum from
the Training Institute on Climate and Society in the Asia-Pacific
Region, which was held at the East-West Center in Honolulu,
Hawaii in February 2001.
To guide the ACT
curriculum design process, a meeting was held in Bangkok
from 6-8 December 2001. Participants included Muntana
Brikshavana (TMD), Eileen Shea (East-West Center), Maxx
Dilley (IRI), Aida Jose (Philippines Atmospheric, Geophysical
and Astronomical Services Administration), Rizaldi Boer
(Bogor Agricultural University, Indonesia), Buddhi Weerasinghe
(ADPC), A R Subbiah (ADPC), Kamal Kishore (ADPC) and Vivian
Raksakulthai (ADPC).
The ACT Workshop
is expected to attract climate information producers and
users in natural resources sectors in ASEAN countries.
It will focus on strengthening the linkages between these
two groups and creating mechanisms for the effective application
of climate information for disaster reduction. The workshop
consists of four modules:
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Understanding Climate Variability and Its Consequences
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Current Climate Forecasting Capabilities
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Applying Climate Information for Decision Making
-
Climate Information Application Systems
The ACT Workshop
is tentatively scheduled for 6-17 May 2002, with approximately
one-third of participants consisting of forecasters and
two-thirds from natural resources sectors that use climate
information. For more information, please contact the
ECE Program at ece@ait.ac.th, (66) 02-524-5354 ext. 407,
or http://www.adpc.ait.ac.th/ece/ece.html
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Program
for Enhancement of Emergency Response (PEER) Updates
First Regional MFR Instructors
Workshop
The first regional MFR Instructors
Workshop was held on 12-20 October 2001 at Jomtien, Pattaya, Thailand.
The workshop was attended by six selected participants from each
of India, Indonesia, Nepal and the Philippines. PEER aims to build
up a team of trainers within partner countries in Asia to work
together to organize and conduct MFR training at country level
for first response organizations.
PEER Program Core Group
Meeting in Nepal
The third annual Core Group
Meeting was held in Kathmandu, Nepal from 26-27 November 2001.
The two-day meeting was attended by Mr Bill Berger, Regional Advisor,
USAID Nepal; Linda Gay Kentro, OFDA, Program Co-coordinator, USAID,
Nepal; Rick Garcia from the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Department;
and Lita Garcia, Program Manager, PEER, ADPC. The Core Group Meeting
was organized both to discuss the workplan for the program's second
phase and to review the first phase.
Medical First Response
Course in Nepal
The Ministry
of Home Affairs of Nepal and ADPC-PEER collaboratively held the
first in-country Medical First Response (MFR) Course for Nepal
at Pokhra in December 2001. It was conducted jointly with the
Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Department (MDFRD) and the United States
Foreign Office of Disaster Assistance (OFDA). The course was aimed
at providing knowledge and skills in medical first response, such
as access to treatment and transportation of injured and sick
victims. It used participatory, interactive instruction methodologies
with practical demonstrations and exercises.
Second
Regional Consultative Committee Meeting
The
second meeting of the ADPC Consultative Committee on Regional
Cooperation in Disaster Management (RCC) was held from 31 October
to 2 November 2001 in Bangkok. The meeting (RCC2) was attended
by 23 delegates from 17 countries and territories, and 13 observers
representing 12 international and regional organizations, ODA
and funding agencies.
Based on recommendations
and action areas identified during RCC1 and RCC2, this direction
for regional cooperation in disaster management was endorsed:
In recognition of the increasing
incidence and severity of both natural, technological and manmade
disaster risks, the meeting encouraged all RCC member countries
to adopt a Total Risk Management strategy. Such a strategy involves
a comprehensive approach to multi-hazard disaster risk management
and reduction, and includes prevention, mitigation and preparedness
in addition to response and recovery.
The meeting discussed action
areas in which the RCC should advance the Total Risk Management
approach, categorized as:
- Building community level
programs for preparedness and mitigation
- Capacity building of
national disaster management systems
- Cooperation with sub-regional
mechanisms such as ASEAN, ICIMOD, MRC, SAARC and SOPAC, and
- Regional initiatives
to create awareness and promote political will.
The RCC meeting also:
- recommended that the
RCC be institutionalized
- endorsed the principle
that senior officials of member country national disaster coordinating
bodies be invited, that the RCC be expanded to include other
Asian countries, and that multilateral and bilateral organizations
be encouraged to participate
- agreed that future meetings
should be organized annually at different regional venues
- decided that there should
be a theme for each meeting, with field visits to see how the
host country
Organizes its disaster management
systems
- set RCC3 for India, with
a focus on the theme of drought
- expressed appreciation
for Australia's financial support of RCC2
- requested ADPC to continue
as the RCC facilitator and convener, and to serve as a regional
focal point and technical resource for the RCC, and
- supported the decision
of the ADPC Board of Trustees to work towards the achievement
of an international (inter-governmental) status organization.
Changing
Concepts of Disaster Management
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Before
Focus on Individual Households
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After
Focus on Community & Strengthening
its Organazation
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First
International Disaster Mitigation Cooperation Seminar in the Republic
of Korea
The
National Institute for Disaster Prevention (NIDP) of the Republic
of Korea held an international seminar entitled "Building
a Disaster Mitigation Collaboration in the 21st Century"
on 6 November 2001 in Seoul. The speakers included Prof Jai-Woo
Song of the School of Urban and Civil Engineering, Hongik University;
Ms Cheng-Chung Hsia, Director General, Urban and Housing Development
Department (UHDD), Taiwan; Mr Satoru Nishikawa, Deputy Executive
Director, Asian Disaster Reduction Center (ADRC); Mr Kamal Kishore,
Director of the Information, Research and Network Support Unit,
ADPC; and Mr Yang-Soo Kim of NIDP. Attended by nearly 300 officials
from government departments and ministries, the seminar's discussions
focused mainly on ongoing efforts to improve disaster response
and mitigation capacities in different parts of Asia.
While presiding over the
opening ceremony, Vice Minister of the Ministry of Government
Administration and Home Affairs, Mr Young Shik Jeong, said, "With
increasing severity of natural disasters, we can no longer look
at disasters as unusual events that happen as a result of the
will of God." He called for development of collaborative
relationships at all levels to prevent disasters. The Director
of NIDP, Mr Dongbok Kim, expressed his organization's commitment
towards developing stronger collaboration with national and international
institutions to enhance capacities for disaster prevention. The
seminar was followed by a one-day field trip to Paju City, which
has repeatedly been affected by floods over the last five years.
Mayor Song Dal-Yong shared his experiences of putting in place
structural and non-structural measures to combat floods in the
city.
Partnerships
for Disaster Reduction in South East Asia
Information Sharing and
Networking: Southeast Asia Regional Disaster Management Practitioners
Meeting
The
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
(IFRC) Vietnam, with technical support from ADPC and funding support
from the European Commission Humanitarian Aid Office, in collaboration
with the Vietnam Red Cross, organized the Southeast Asia Regional
Disaster Management Practitioners Meeting from 13-15 November
2001 in Da Nang, Vietnam. This was a follow-up initiative to the
Hanoi meeting hosted by APS Vietnam in October 1999 on "Sharing
Experiences: A Networking Approach to Disaster Preparedness",
which aimed at establishing a regional network among disaster
management practitioners in Southeast Asia, and the September
2001 Bangkok meeting on "Strategy for Information Exchange
on Disaster Reduction" hosted by ADPC under its PDR-SEA project,
which developed a regional information exchange strategy and identified
areas of common concern for possible cooperation.
The
Da Nang meeting brought together 56 participants from Cambodia,
Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam, representing 11 DIPECHO partner NGOs, 24 other NGOs and
three NDMOs. Discussion and experience-sharing enhanced participants'
understanding of such key disaster management issues as extreme
climatic events, damage assessment and needs analysis, community-based
risk reduction measures, and the use of indigenous knowledge.
Field visits to five communes in Thua Thien Hue Province provided
an opportunity for participants to see how CODEV, Vietnam Red
Cross, Canadian Center for International Studies and Cooperation
(CECI), and Development Workshop projects on community-based flood
preparedness, mitigation, and rehabilitation and recovery have
improved people's lives. The projects include reinforced houses,
relocation houses, retrofitted primary school, flood shelters
(used as nursery schools during non-flood times) fitted with lights
and sirens for early warning, rescue boats built by local craftsmen,
and a safe harbor. The experience should help improve the effectiveness
of community-based risk reduction initiatives of participant NGOs,
and facilitate coordination between NGOs and NDMOs.
Though the three-day meeting
was exhausting, participants lauded the effort to bring together
disaster management practitioners, especially from the NGO sector,
with the inclusion of non-DIPECHO partners, to share information
and experiences and strengthen linkages between organizations.
Participants agreed to continue this effort through annual meetings.
They strongly felt the need for national networks first, before
the setting up of a formal regional network of NGOs. They agreed,
however, on an informal regional network, mainly through PDR-SEA
activities.
About PDR-SEA
PDR-SEA is a regional
project implemented by ADPC, with funding from the European
Commission Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO) under its Second
DIPECHO Action Plan for South East Asia. The one-year project,
which commenced in March 2001, aims to develop community
capacity to prevent or mitigate the impact of disasters
through training and information exchange among partners
in the regional DIPECHO target countries: Cambodia, Indonesia,
Lao PDR, the Philippines and Vietnam. This will be achieved
through:
- Development of
an information exchange strategy,
- Strengthening networking
among National Disaster Management Organizations/Coordinating
Bodies (NDMOs),
- Review, update
and development of disaster management training databases
and materials, and
- Capacity building
of DIPECHO partners in community-based disaster management
(CBDM).
For more information
about PDR-SEA, please contact Mr. Rustico Binas,PDR-SEA
Project Manager, Tel: (662) 524 5354 Fax: (662) 524 5350
E-mail: adpc@ait.ac.th
Website: http://www.adpc.ait.ac.th/pdr-sea/pdr-sea.html
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Upcoming
Events
Applied Research grants
for Disaster Risk Reduction
Starting early next year the University of Wisconsin-Disaster
Management Center (UW-DMC) in collaboration with the Asian Disaster
Preparedness Center (ADPC), and the Cranfield Disaster Management
Center (CDMC), proposes to implement a one year Applied Research
Grants Program in Disaster Risk Reduction. The Grant is being
sponsored by the ProVention Consortium and managed by the World
Bank's Disaster Management Facility (DMF). This grant is being
provided with the aim that this activity will facilitate the identification
of component professional with innovative ideas in disaster risk
reduction, a competitive forum. The competition will be open to
students and young professionals from developing countries. The
UW-DMC, ADPC and CDMC, will be responsible for the Latin American
and Caribbean Region, Asia and Africa respectively. The competition
announcement will be sent out in January 2002.
South
Asia Regional Disaster Insurance and Risk Management
The Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC) has been assigned
a six week research work on "Disaster Insurance and Risk
Mangement in South Asia" by the World Bank's Disaster Management
Center with the objective to contribute to the disaster risk reduction
in the region. The assignment will involve collection and analysis
of data and writing of a report on the disaster history and the
economic and social impacts of natural disaster in the South Asia
Region. The Research Program is scheduled to commence early next
year.
World
Bank Prevention Consortium, ADPC Workshop
A workshop titled "From Relief to Reconstruction-Developiong
a Framework for Assessing Damage and Needs" is scheduled
for March 2002, in Bangkok, Thailand. The proposed 4 day workshop
will be jointly held by the World Bank, Prevention Consortium
and the Asian Disaster Preparedness Center. The workshop will
focus on the reconstruction needs assessment requirements arising
from mainly floods, cyclones/typhoons, and earthquakes and will
draw on the experiences from the recent disaster events in Asia.
The proposed output of the workshop will be:
Improved
damage and reconstruction needs assessment methodology
Guidelines for reconstruction program planning, management and
implementation
Identification of future training needs.
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