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Regional Workshop on Innovative Approaches to Flood Risk Reduction in the Mekong Basin
 

The annual Mekong floods are part of the lives of the communities living in the lower Mekong Basin Countries. Running 4,800 km from its headwaters on the Tibetan Plateau through Yunnan Province of China, Burma, Thailand, Lao PDR, Cambodia, and Vietnam, Mekong, the 10th longest river in the world, plays host to rich variety of fish and marine life to the inhabitants of its Delta. Additionally, the annual floods of Mekong carry nourished top soil from the upstream and deposit them in the downstream areas, creating rich fertile flood plains for the approximately 53 million people, populating the lower Mekong Basin countries namely Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam.

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Conversely, the recurring annual floods of Mekong also cause devastating socio-economic and human losses. Recent extreme floods in the Mekong basin were observed in the year 2000, 2001 and 2002. 2000 floods in particular cost the lives of more than 800 people, many of them are children, mostly in Cambodia and Vietnam, and the agricultural production in the delta suffered a serious blow, and hundreds of kilometers of roads were damaged or washed away.

Fully recognizing the benefits of the annual floods, the importance of floodplains and the increasing demands of development they are facing, and at the same time taking into account the need for the disruptive nature of floods to be minimized to enable the river basin communities to achieve sustainable development, a range of innovative flood risk reduction and sustainable development programs are being implemented in the countries of the Mekong Basin.

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The Flood Management and Mitigation Program (FMMP) of the Mekong River Commission’s (MRC) applies the principles of integrated flood risk management to contribute to its objective “people’s suffering and economic losses due to floods are prevented, minimized, or mitigated, while the environmental benefits of floods are preserved”. The program started in September 2004 and its implementation will continue until 2011. The FMMP comprises of five components:

  1. Establishment of a Regional Flood Management and Mitigation Center at Phnom Penh, Cambodia

  2. Structural and Flood Proofing Measures

  3. Mediation of Trans-boundary Flood Issues

  4. Flood Emergency Management Strengthening

  5. Land Management.

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FMMP’s Component 4 on “Flood Emergency Management Strengthening (FEMS)” has four projects (2 completed and two ongoing) implemented by the Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC), in partnership with Mekong River Commission (MRC). These FMMP Component 4 projects are funded through the “Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH” and the European Commission Humanatarian Aid Department (ECHO). The objective of FEMS is to “ensure emergency management systems in the riparian countries are dealing more effectively with Mekong floods”. Significant work has been done under the Component 4 of the FFMP in developing and implementing Flood Preparedness Program (FPP), strengthening capacities of national, provincial, district line agencies in integrating FPP priority actions into local development planning, raising public awareness on flood risk reduction, promoting regional knowledge sharing and enhancing trans-boundary emergency cooperation.

In the past decade remarkable initiatives on flood risk reduction have been carried out in the communities at risk by government agencies (e.g. NDMOs, hydromet services, ministry of natural resources, etc.) and other stakeholders, including UN agencies, international and local civil society organisations with the common objectives of enhancing local governments’ and communities’ capacities and resilience, improving preparedness and mitigating flood risks.

Flood risk reduction is becoming an integral part of the Mekong river basin management, and is contributing to wider goals of poverty reduction and sustainable development and through strategies to reduce vulnerabilities and enhance coping capacities.

 

 

 


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