|
UDRM HOME |
...................................................... |
|
PROMISE HOME |
...................................................... |
|
OVERVIEW
|
|
|
...................................................... |
|
PROGRAM COMPONENTS
|
|
|
...................................................... |
|
MONITORING & EVALUATION |
|
|
...................................................... |
|
INFORMATION
RESOURCES |
|
|
...................................................... |
|
CONTACT INFORMATION
|
|
PROGRAM BROCHURE |
|
|
|
|
...................................................... |
supported by
|
|
Disaster Mitigation
in Asia
30
September 2006
Issue No. 39
The Program
for Hydro-meteorological Disaster Mitigation
in Secondary Cities in Asia (PROMISE),
funded by USAID/OFDA, commenced from October
2005. Through consultations with a number of
ADPC partners, five project countries have
been selected – Bangladesh, Pakistan, the
Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam – for
implementing demonstration projects in each
country in a highly vulnerable city with
recent history of hydro-meteorological
disasters. Other components of the program
consist of capacity building, risk
management advocacy, networking and
dissemination initiatives in the selected
countries. The objective of the program is
to contribute towards reduction of
vulnerability of urban communities through
enhanced preparedness and mitigation of
hydro-meteorological disasters in South and
Southeast Asia. The implementation of city
demonstration projects are expected to
continue during July to September 2006. The
planning and development of city
interventions and of training programs to be
delivered in each country by the PROMISE
partners should be the main focus from
October to December 2006.
PROMISE Activities for
September and October
2006:
-
BANGLADESH - BDPC is continuing the
ward sensitization meetings in two areas
of Ward #2. Thirty-five participants
attended the meeting for Ward #2,
responding to invitations sent to all
types of members of the community. BDPC
met with the Ward Commissioner to
coordinate the meeting, and the
Commissioner issued the invitations to
participants During the course of the
meeting, the project was introduced to
the participants, and the ward's
disaster risk management committee was
formed and the change agents identified.
-
PAKISTAN - AKPBS,P collected
rainfall data for the unusually heavy
rain that happened in September that
resulted in the flooding of large areas
of Hyderabad. Hazard mapping and
vulnerability assessment was being
conducted for the study areas. Thirteen
staff members attended the GIS training
conducted by ADPC, and after the
training the collection of data points
for a GIS application on flooding began.
An MOU with the Sindh Agricultural and
Forestry Workers Coordinating
Organization (SAFWCO) as training
partner was developed and signed. In
other news, AKPBS,P is one of two
organizations that received the World
Habitat Award from UN Habitat on October
2, 2006 in ceremonies in Naples, Italy,
for innovative and sustainable housing
solutions. The other winner is the
Johannesburg Housing Company in South
Africa.
-
PHILIPPINES - CDP and Dagupan City's
Technical Working Group conducted two
workshops on Early Warning and
Evacuation. The first workshop was for
60 participants from the 8 pilot
barangays of Dagupan. The second
workshop was for 35 participants from
the City Disaster Coordinating Council.
The second workshop included sessions on
risk mapping, and a discussion and
eventual clarification of the roles of
the various members of the council. CDP
and Dagupan City Government also
participated in the preparations for the
PROMISE Regional Course on Governance
and Disaster Risk Reduction, the 2006
PROMISE Annual Working Group Meeting,
and for the study trip to Dagupan City.
The study trip to Dagupan was covered by
the local media, and appeared on the
online publication SunStar, and the
article can be found at
http://www.sunstar.com.ph/. The
activities for the next month include
installing the flood markers for the
early warning system, developing a
collaboration with Dr. Rhodora Gonzalez
of the University of the Philippines for
spatial data collection by student
volunteers, and the implementation of
small-scale flood mitigation measures.
- SRI
LANKA - Sarvodaya is continuing the
hazard and vulnerability mapping, with
six communities already in the process
of mapping. The six communities are also
developing their respective emergency
response plan and mitigation plan. The
site selection for measuring points for
the early warning system has begun, with
four points identified. Their technical
partner, the National Building Research
Organization, has begun surveying river
cross sections and the hydrological
modeling. Sarvodaya contacted key
partners in search and rescue
operations, and a SAR team has been
formed to include the UNDP, the Kalutara
Disaster Management Committee (DMC), the
Kalutara District Secretary, and
Sarvodaya. The location for an Emergency
Operations Center has been identified,
and the training for the emergency
operating procedures are next to be
developed.
-
VIET NAM - CECI finalized the hazard
and vulnerability assessment of Da Nang
City, and submitted it to ADPC. The
assessment covered three hazards:
typhoon, drought, and inundation. The
most exposed wards of the Cam Le
District, the study area for Da Nang
City, were identified per hazard as well
as the ward most exposed to all three
hazards. The impacts of each hazard were
assessed, the specific vulnerabilities
were identified, and the capacities to
cope were identified. Recommendations
for improvement for each ward were made
specific to the vulnerabilities faced
and original capacities of the
respective communities. CECI also
finalized the training manual for the
Community-Based Disaster Risk
Management, and will implement the CBDRM
training next month.
SPECIAL
FOCUS ON PROMISE ACTIVITIES
- The
regional course on governance and
disaster risk reduction was launched in
Manila on September 25. It is designed
to develop local government
professionals sensitive to issues
presented by recurrent
hydro-meteorological hazards. The course
covered urban governance and risk
management, vulnerability reduction,
community-based and participatory
approaches to disaster risk management,
and mainstreaming risk reduction as a
component of governance. Participants
came mainly from country partners and
the demonstration cities in this
program: Bangladesh Disaster
Preparedness Center (BDPC) with
Chittagong City Corporation in
Bangladesh; Sarvodaya Shramadana
Movement (Sarvodaya) with the Kalutara
Municipal Council in Sri Lanka; Center
for International Studies and
Cooperation (CECI) with Da Nang City
Government in Viet Nam; and Center for
Disaster Preparedness (CDP) with Dagupan
City Government in the Philippines.
Other invited guests came from
organizations that are targeted to adopt
the courses developed in this regional
course, for integration into their
existing training programs on local
governance.
- The
1st Annual Working Group Meeting for
PROMISE was held on 2-4 October in
Manila. The meeting covered the status,
implementation, and monitoring of
PROMISE, and will have planning
workshops for the second year of the
program. Delegations from the five
program countries (Bangladesh, Pakistan,
the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam)
attended the meeting. Each delegation
consisted of the senior executives of
each country partner, representatives
from the demonstration cities, and other
invited guests who will provide
technical support to country partners.
Representatives from each delegation
presented status reports on hazard and
(participatory) vulnerability
assessments conducted so far. Only the
representatives from Da Nang City
government could not attend due to
flight cancellations and emergency
operations in response to tropical storm
Xangsane.
- A
study trip to Marikina City was
conducted on October 4 as part of the
Working Group Meeting, and was hosted by
Marikina City Mayor Ma. Lourdes C.
Fernando. At Marikina, a presentation
was made on the city's flooding risk
mitigation activities, with emphasis on
flooding risk assessment and relocation
of informal settlers. After the
presentation, the participants visited
the emergency telephone hotline "162"
operations center that receives all
emergency calls for immediate response
by the police, fire brigade or the
city's emergency medical service.
- A
study trip to Dagupan City was conducted
on October 5 for PROMISE national
coordinators and Mr. Robert Barton of
USAID-OFDA. The trip was hosted by
Dagupan City Mayor Benjamin Lim and Ms.
Mayfourth Luneta of CDP. A brief visit
was made to the Bureau of Fisheries and
Aquatic Resources research center, a
facility that supports the bangus fish
industry of Dagupan. Most of the visit
was to the eight pilot barangays to
observe the barangays' early warning
system, evacuation centers, hazard maps,
and workshop outputs (including
timelines, behavior assessments, social
Venn diagrams and problem tree
analyses).
A. FROM THE
REGION
(1) Typhoon
Xangsane lashes at the Philippines, 28
September 2006
(based on
reports from the Philipipine Daily Inquirer,
Reuters, NASA, the IFRC, and the US Embassy
in Manila)
Typhoon "Milenyo"
(international name: Xangsane) brought Metro
Manila to a near-standstill on September 28.
The strongest typhoon, shown in this MODIS
satellite image from NASA, to hit Metro
Manila directly in 11 years caused the
cities of Manila and Muntinlupa have
declared a state of calamity following the
devastation by Typhoon Milenyo.
In Manila, 897 barangays were affected.
Mayor Lito Atienza said it was the first
time the Manila city council declared a
city-wide state of calamity. Muntinlupa
evacuated 1,264 families in the city's eight
barangays. Manila Councilor Ernesto Dionisio,
majority floor leader, said that with the
declaration, each barangay could use USD 600
to 1,000 from its calamity fund for
rehabilitation purposes.
The international community is responding to
the impact of Typhoon Xangsane. The
International Federation of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies is launching a
preliminary emergency appeal for 5.7 million
Swiss francs (USD 4.6 million) to support
the Philippines National Red Cross (PNRC).
U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines Kristie
A. Kenney issued a disaster declaration on
September 29, and the Office of U.S. Foreign
Disaster Assistance (OFDA) is providing
$100,000 to the Philippine Red Cross.
Left figure:
Satellite image of Xangsane over the
Philippines from NASA website.
The only
positive outcome was in Taguig City where
the typhoon washed away breeding grounds of
dengue-carrying mosquitoes, leading to a 56%
drop in dengue cases after the typhoon hit.
A listing of the impacts reported in
newspapers includes:
- Flooding and
landslides
- Luzon-wide
blackout
- An estimated
18,000 houses in Luzon were either
destroyed or damaged by Milenyo
- In Metro
Manila, damages of P100 million in
landscaping and P30 million in traffic
equipment.
- For Region 8,
the total damage to infrastructure,
crops and fisheries is at PhP 133
million.
- Thousands of
trees felled
- Billboards and
lampposts felled
- Trucks and cars
overturned
- Suspension of
classes in all levels in Metro Manila
- All government
offices in Metro Manila were closed
- Thousands
stranded as flights and sea travel were
canceled
- Overhead trains
systems stopped
- Trading on
stock and currency markets suspended
(2) Typhoon
Xangsane hits Danang, Viet Nam, 1 October
2006
(based on on
reports from Reuters, BBC, NASA, the US
Embassy in Hanoi, and globeandmail.com)
Flooding
killed dozens of people in the days after
Typhoon Xangsane hit Viet Nam. An estimated
300,000 peoplewere evacuated from Viet Nam's
central coastal provinces to safer
locations. The Vietnam government said 59
people died and 7 were missing after the
typhoon hit on Sunday, but state-run media
accounts indicated a higher death toll of at
least 68, citing provincial disaster
reports. A Danang city health official was
quoted as saying that 435 were injured and
more than 1,000 residents had been
hospitalised.
The government estimated the cost of the
damage at 10 trillion dong (USD 624
million). The storm's fierce winds and rain
destroyed or damaged hundreds of thousands
of homes when it slammed into Viet Nam's
central coast. Nearly 320,000 homes were
destroyed or submerged. Homes collapsed and
roofs were ripped off in Danang and the
nearby ancient town of Hoi An. Xangsane
damaged roads, telecommunications and power
networks, fisheries and crops along a
roughly 1,000 km (600-mile) stretch. Danang
had the worst damage estimated at USD 200
million.
The U.S. Embassy Hanoi through the Office of
U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) is
providing $100,000 to the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies for support of relief operations
by the Red Cross of Vietnam.
Xangsane, which means "elephant" in the Lao
language, weakened into a tropical storm
weakened after landing in Vietnam, moved
westward to Laos, and dissipated over
northern Thailand.
Right figure: Xangsane track forecast from
NASA website.
(3) Man-made mud
"volcano" in Indonesia, 5 October 2006
(based on
reports from the New York Times)
A natural gas
well has become geysers of mud and water in
a largely man-made calamity in the making.
As of October 5th, the mud has inundated
eight villages in Kendungbendo, covering an
area 1.5 square miles, and forcing the
evacuation of around 13,000 people. The
highway and railway lines have been cut, and
homes and factories are submerged.
The mud is continuing to flow at the rate of
about 170,000 cubic yards a day. The problem
was originally perceived as a mud volcano
that was set off by seismic activity. Now,
it seems the disaster occurred as a company,
Lapindo Brantas, drilled thousands of feet
to tap natural gas and used practices that
geologists, mining engineers and Indonesian
officials described as faulty. Lapinto was
drilling an unprotected well bore, and the
mud started seeping in from the sides at a
depth of about 6,000 feet. The company
installed plugs to seal off the mud
intrusion, and the mud flowed elsewhere,
erupting through the earth's surface as
several mud volcanoes or geysers.
The costs of the cleanup could easily reach
$1 billion. The New York Times reported that
Indonesian officials describe the best
option is to pump the mud into the Porong
River, which flows into the sea 20 miles
north of here. The proposal will lead to
severe damage of the ecosystem around that
area.
However, the New York Times reports that
Lapindo's parent company The Bakrie Group
announced that it was selling Lapindo for
two US dollars to Lyte Ltd., a company that
is registered in the offshore island of
Jersey. The majority shareholder in the
parent company is the Bakrie Group, and the
Bakrie Group is also the sole owner of Lyte,
according to public documents.
B. CALLS FOR SUBMISSION
(4)
Call for Papers: Risk and Rationalities
Conference, March 29-31 2007
Economic and
Social Research Council's Social Contexts
and Responses to Risk Network is calling for
papers for a Risk and Rationalities
conference to be held in Cambridge, United
Kingdom, March 29-31, 2007. The theme is how
people identify and manage risks and
uncertainties, stressing the importance of
rational action, of culture, of emotions and
affect, of everyday cognitive heuristics, of
intuition, and of the role of trust. E-mail
abstracts (maximum 150 words) by Friday,
October 30, 2006, to Mary Mustafa at
M.Mustafa@kent.ac.uk; +44 (0)1227
827102. For more information, visit
http://www.kent.ac.uk/scarr/events/rrcontext.htm.
(5)
Call for Entries: St. Andrews Prize for the
Environment
The University
of St. Andrews and ConocoPhillips have
announced the call for entries for the ninth
international St. Andrews Prize for the
Environment. Applications are invited from
individuals, multidisciplinary teams, and
community groups for the 2007 annual prize
of $50,000 for the winner and $10,000 each
of the two runners-up. Entries should give
innovative solutions to environmental
problems. The solutions should be practical,
combining good science, economic reality,
and political acceptability. Anyone wishing
to join should submit a single page project
summary of no more than 500 words by October
31, 2006. For more information visit:
http://www.thestandrewsprize.com/ or the
St. Andrews Prize for the environment
office, +44 (0)1334 462544 or + 44 (0)1334
462161 (Scotland);prize@st-andrews.ac.uk.
(6)
Call for Entries: Asia and Pacific Student
Essay Competition on Sustainable Development
ADB and ROAD,
with support of the Japan Special Fund,
financed by the Government of Japan, invite
university students to participate in the
Asia and Pacific Student Essay Competition
on Sustainable Development. The rules are
simple: just submit an essay on one of the
designated themes via this website
http://mms.adb.org:8000/adb-essay/register.php
no later than 31 October 2006.
(7)
Call for Papers: Confronting Catastrophe
A session on
"Confronting Catastrophe: New Directions in
Disaster Research and Policy" to be held at
the joint meeting of the Midwest
Sociological Society and the North Central
Sociological Association in Chicago,
Illinois, April 4-7, 2007. Papers will be
considered that examine any topic concerning
the preparedness for, response to, or
recovery from natural, technological, or
human-initiated hazards and disasters. Both
U.S. and international cross-cultural
research are welcome. For more information,
go to
http://www.themss.org/ or contact
William Lovekamp (welovekamp@eiu.edu)
and Lori Peek (lori.peek@colostate.edu).
Deadline for submissions is October 31, 2006/.
(8)
Call for Papers: Symposium on Remote Sensing
of Environment
The Technical
Program Committee for the 32nd International
Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment
is seeking papers for the symposium, which
is scheduled for June 25-29, 2007, in San
Jose, Costa Rica. The committee will
consider and evaluate all abstracts
submitted that focus on topics/subtopics
related to disaster risk reduction and/or
using remote sensing technology: Abstracts
are due no later than November 15, 2006.
Find out more at
http://www.cenat.ac.cr/simposio/callforpapers.htm
and
http://www.cenat.ac.cr/simposio/submission.htm.
C. CONFERENCES AND COURSES
(9)
2007 ISDR World Disaster Reduction Campaign,
October 11, 2006
Organizers:
United Nations International Strategy for
Disaster Reduction (ISDR) .This year's
International Day for Disaster Reduction is
Wednesday, October 11. For more information
about the 2006-2007 World Disaster Reduction
Campaign, including a press kit, case
studies, a list of events, and online
resources, visit
http://www.unisdr.org/wdrc-2006-2007/.
(10)
Winning Against Disasters - Roles of
Education, Development and Community Action
for Sustainable Development. Tokyo, Japan:
October 19, 2006
Organizer:
Asian Disaster Reduction Center. ADRC will
hold a public forum "Winning Against
Disasters - Roles of Education, Development
and Community Action for Sustainable
Development" at U Thant International
Conference Hall, UN House in Tokyo from
14:00-17:30 on 19 October 2006. The deadline
for registration is October 12, 2006. For
more information, please visit:
http://www.adrc.or.jp/events/octoberforum/October_Forum_E.htm.
(11)
Flood Disaster Risk Management. Bangkok,
Thailand: March 5-16, 2007
Organizer:
Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC).
This course offers an integrated approach to
the development of flood risk reduction
strategies that involves engineering,
settlement, development, public
administration, community-based strategies,
and land use planning (with environmental
considerations). For more information,
please contact the Training Resource Group,
ADPC;
tedadpc@adpc.net;
http://www.adpc.net/trg06/trg_home.htm.
(12)
International Conference on Water and Flood
Management. Dhaka, Bangladesh: March 12-14,
2007
Organizer:
Institute of Water and Flood Management (IWFM)
of Bangladesh University of Engineering and
Technology (BUET). The purpose of this
conference is to address issues related to
water and flood management to promote
environmentally sustainable development. For
more information, contact the IWFM
Conference Secretariat; +880 2 9665601
(Bangladesh);
icwfm@iwfm.buet.ac.bd;
http://www.buet.ac.bd/icwfm/.
(13)
15th World Conference in Disasters and
Emergency Management. Amsterdam,
Netherlands: May 13-16, 2007
Organizers:
World Association for Disaster and Emergency
Medicine. The conference central themes are
preparedness, knowledge, training, and
networks. For more information, please
contact: +31 (0)20 444 8444 (Netherlands);
paog@vumc.nl;
http://www.wcdem2007.org/.
D. USEFUL RESOURCES
(14)
Communicating with the Traveling Public
during Disasters
"Communicating
with the Public Using ATIS during Disasters:
Concept of Operations" details a concept of
operations for the dissemination of
information to the traveling public during
disaster events. The document can be found
here:
http://www.itsdocs.fhwa.dot.gov/JPODOCS/REPTS_TE/14262.htm.
(15)
NOAA Economics and Social Sciences
This site
includes a library of papers, articles, and
analyses on the socioeconomic impacts of
oceanic and atmospheric science and related
technologies. The site is found here:
http://www.economics.noaa.gov/.
(16)
Disasters and U.S. Law
The Law
Library at the University of California,
Berkeley developed this online resource on
American law's response to natural
disasters. Resources include relevant
articles, responses from government and
military officials, policy papers, opinion
pieces, regulatory guidance, and statutory
authority. The resource can be found here:
http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/disasters.html.
(17)
CRS Report: Disaster Evacuation and
Displacement Policy
This is a
summary of policy options on integrating
federal and state government in emergency
evacuation. This report from the
Congressional Research Service (CRS) can be
found here:
http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/67846.pdf.
(18)
CRS Report: Disaster Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations, 1989-2005
This report
from the Congressional Research Service
(CRS) provides summary data on emergency
supplemental appropriations enacted after
major disasters since 1989. The report can
be found here:
http://www.opencrs.com/rpts/RL33226_20060109.pdf.
(19)
"Weathering Corruption" by Leeson and Sobel
This working
paper explores the effect of disaster relief
provided by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency on public corruption. The paper can
be found here:
http://www.mercatus.org/Publications/pubID.2691/pub_detail.asp.
(20)
CorpWatch report: "Big, Easy Money: Disaster
Profiteering on the American Gulf Coast"
This report
describes how disaster profiteers make
millions while local companies and laborers
in New Orleans and the rest of the
Katrina-devastated Gulf Coast region are
being left behind. The report can be found
here:
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14023.
|
|
Related links for this page |
|
|
|
Issues
by Month
2010
Jan,
Feb,
Mar,
Apr,
May,
Jun,
Jul,
Aug,
Sep,
Oct, Nov, Dec
2009
Jan,
Feb,
Mar,
Apr,
May,
Jun,
Jul,
Aug,
Sep,
Oct,
Nov,
Dec
2008
Jan,
Feb,
Mar,
Apr,
May,
Jun,
Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov,
Dec
2007
Jan,
Feb,
Mar,
Apr,
May,
Jun,
Jul,
Aug,
Sep,
Oct,
Nov,
Dec
2006
Jan,
Feb,
Mar ,
Apr, May,
Jun,
Jul,
Aug,
Sep,
Oct,
Nov,
Dec |
|