Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Earthquakes Japan 2013

This is an overview of all the earthquakes in Japan in 2013, sorted per magnitude and shindo (震度, shaking intensity). This data was generated by using the Japan Meteorological Agency database.



The most earthquakes in a single category were shindo 1 and magnitude 3-3.9, still roughly double the amount of 2010.
Shindo 1 earthquakes ranged from magnitude 1 to 7.9.
Shindo 2 earthquakes ranged from magnitude 2 to 6.9.
Shindo 3 earthquakes ranged from magnitude 2 to 8.9 (Sea of Okhotsk, North of Hokkaido).
Shindo 4 earthquakes ranged from magnitude 3 to 7.9.
Shindo 5- earthquakes ranged from magnitude 4 to 5.9.
Shindo 5+ earthquakes ranged from magnitude 5 to 6.9.
The Shindo 6- earthquake fell into magnitude 6 to 6.9.

Below the frequency distribution of earthquakes during the year is shown:


Comparing the JMA statistics with the data from their database, all earthquakes were found in the database.

JMA:
Intensity 震度7 震度6強 震度6弱 震度5強 震度5弱 震度4 震度3 震度2 震度1 Total
2013 0 0 1 6 5 52 187 613 1523 2387

Database:
Intensity 震度7 震度6強 震度6弱 震度5強 震度5弱 震度4 震度3 震度2 震度1 Total
2013 0 0 1 6 5 52 187 613 1523 2387

Monday, December 30, 2013

News in Japan - December

GEJET
Typhoons spread Fukushima fallout, study warns
TEPCO wins rare praise from Nuclear Reform Monitoring Committee
Gov't proposes extra measures to deal with Fukushima water
Fukushima remains very complex despite progress: IAEA
Slippery clay intensified 2011 tsunami-quake, scientists say
Fukushima water tanks: leaky and built with illegal labor
Fukushima contractor denies claims its staff concealed work terms
Japan lacks decommissioning experts for Fukushima

Japan
Japanese college students struggle to answer basic astronomy questions
Top court says transsexual is father of IVF baby
Irregular working conditions grinding women down
One fourth of jr high school girls don't exercise
80% of 'black companies' guilty of illegal business practices, survey finds
Japan's Daycare Shortage Hits Women in Work

Netherlands
Netherlands reclaims aid (Dutch)
Quays in Rotterdam are flooded (Dutch) Alerting trucks are driving through the streets to warn the inhabitants. The water is knee high in several streets along the New Meuse. Passing transportation ships are requested to drop their speeds to prevent waves.

USA
New York train derailment: Passengers 'impaled'
Sea-Level Rise to Drive Coastal Flooding, Regardless of Change in Cyclone Activity A rise in sea level of 1 meter for the New York City region would result in the present-day 100-year flood events occurring every 3 to 20 years.

Other hazards
Humans Threaten Wetlands' Ability to Keep Pace With Sea-Level Rise

Vulnerable people

Monday, December 23, 2013

China International Water Law

The website of China International Water Law, by the Xiamen International Water Law Research Group at Xiamen University has a wealth of information on Chinese water laws as well as full access to publications on the topic of transboundary water management. 

Xiamen is located on the coast in Fujian province, near Taiwan. Did you know that China has more than 50 transboundary watercourses shared by its 31 provinces and regions and 14 neighboring countries? Find out more about Chinese water policies on the website


Friday, December 13, 2013

R&D seminar Post Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan, 1330) : Philippine DRRM against water related disaster

Today we had a presentation by Hayato Nakamura, who is Project Formulation Advisor at the JICA Philippine Office. He showed many pictures of the destruction of the typhoon last November 8-9, and explained different response measures. The fact that the storm was approaching was not widely known among the people. One reason was that the wide spread SMS network had gone offline.

One issue increasing vulnerability is the lack of enforcement of building codes. While there are criteria for safely constructing concrete buildings, it was found that many of the destroyed buildings contained shore sand and seashells, which could not withstand the storm. In general, reinforced concrete buildings were found to be the most efficient in withstanding the storm.

Another issue is people's concept of the river area. Many people have no idea of where the river area exactly is and as a consequence live inside the area. One photo even showed a city hall built inside the river area. People usually manage floods by evacuating and surviving on the second floor of their buildings, if there is one, and if the flood stays below it. During this typhoon, an older woman explained she didn't dare go outside when her house began to flood, as she was afraid the fierce winds would have killed her. Luckily she had an air pocket between herself and the ceiling so she could survive. For her it was a matter of debating how she would die, outside in the storm or inside drowning in her house.

Given that many reports (UN, ADB, HFA) have named the Philippines as a great example of successful disaster risk reduction and preparedness, in combination with the damages of this disaster, I asked him if he thought the Philippines could still be described as a success. He responded very positively, and contrasted the new Philippine disaster act  from 2010 to the Japanese bast from 1961. Many things have been changed drastically, such as the increase in DRR (5% of the local government budget) and the creation of DRM plans. So naturally Japan has had more time to enact their law, and Philippines is still in the process.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

New map of Japan by GSI

The Geographical Survey Institute has released a new online interactive map of Japan.

What's interactive about it? Outside of the regular maps with volcanoes and historical pictures, they have added many layers of additional information. For instance, you can select the category 'disaster prevention' and view the crustal deformation from the GEJET per prefecture. It shows Tsukuba's ground surface subsided about 10 cm.
Areas in Aomori, Akita and Yamagata were raised about 3-10 cm, whereas the entire East coast from Iwate to Chiba experienced some amount of subsidence. The highest figure is -114 cm, on the coast line Northeast of Sendai city. All in all, a great map for scientific reference.

Friday, November 29, 2013

News in Japan - November

GEJET
Regulators OKs fuel rod removal from pool at Fukushima plant
Video: This Is How Removal of Fuel Assemblies from Reactor 4 Spent Fuel Pool Is to Be Carried Out, According to TEPCO
For many Fukushima evacuees, the truth is they won't be going home

Japan
This is the year of the typhoon
http://www.japanquakemap.com/
Osaka estimates 133,000 could die if quake hits Nankai Trough the number of deaths could be reduced by 80% if evacuations begin within 10 minutes of a tsunami alert.
Japan's poor gender gap worsening, WEF survey finds
System ‘failing asylum seekers’
Long green card wait has happy ending for Japan woman and wife
1,500 disabled Japanese abused in half-year period
Thousands protest against tough new official secrets law
Japan to spend Y1 tril on public works for stimulus
Foreign trainees in Japan face exploitation

Netherlands
Tornado affected Netherlands (Dutch)
Deaths from storm in Netherlands (Dutch)
Amount of people aged 45 and up with poor literacy skills is growing (Dutch)

USA
Midwest tornadoes, winds slam towns and trucks; 5 killed in Illinois
Kids Today Run Slower Than Their Parents Did

Other
Scientists Develop New Method to Help Global Coasts Adapt to Sea-Level Rise


Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Deep earthquake

A very deep earthquake occurred last night, at a depth of some 350 km. Probably due to fault lines not being vertical, the quake was felt to be the strongest some 350 km Eastward, resulting in the below awkward map from JMA:


It was only shindou 2, so we could continue our sleep.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Talk by Kunio Okamura, Senior special advisor of JICA

As part of the course on official development assistance, we had a talk by Kunio Okamura.

He started off detailing his career at JICA, from the moment the 'new JICA' was formed in 2008 by combining agencies to 11 months later, when he became the face all over the national news as the new administration of the Democratic Party of Japan targeted existing policies, especially those spending lots of money. We then learned that Japan actually provides a huge amount of aid to developing countries, and that JICA's funds make it bigger than the Asian Development Bank, but slightly smaller than the world bank.

JICA has supported many countries, including Singapore, South Korea and China, which are famous examples of countries that have risen above the developing status. China is now not only the country with the second largest GNP in the world, but is also providing ODA itself. In fact, the so called BRIC countries (Brasil, Russia, India, China) are even discussing about setting up their own development bank in about 2 years.

He also touched on some trends in population and income. Russia is the country with the highest income disparity, with around 146 million inhabitants and 140 billionaires. The population increase in certain countries is slowing down, such as Japan where it has already become negative (-0.1%); whereas Sub-Saharan Africa countries have figures close to the world average of 2.4% (around 2.7%); and in some countries in the Middle East it is as high as 6 or 7%. It is expected that countries such as Pakistan, Nigeria, Bangladesh and Congo, which are now classified as fragile states, will increase in population 25-50%. Another global demographic issue is that more than 50% of all people now live in cities, while 70% of all energy is consumed and 80% of all greenhouse emissions occur in urban areas.

I asked if in his opinion one of the goals of JICA was to make itself unnecessary, or in other words, that JICA aims to provide so much support to develop a country that it would no longer need the assistance of JICA in the future. Aside from the aforementioned success countries, he foresaw a shift of issues JICA or the global society would have to deal with in the near future. The main issue is aging, as after 2030 it is expected that ASEAN countries will all have to deal with this and there is no solution yet. He concluded with the strong wish, that in 30 to 40 years JICA would become unnecessary. Let's hope so.


Talk by Kenzo Oshima, commissioner of the NRA

As part of the course of official development assistance, we had a talk by Kenzo Oshima.

He described himself as a retired diplomat, not a technical nuclear expert, and he has been involved in the nuclear regulation authority for 1.5 years now. The NRA has a chairman and 4 commissioners, as well as over 400 staff (experts/engineers) in many fields, not just nuclear science. It will expand in March 2014 with technical support agencies who have professionals in nuclear science, to up to 1000 members.

He provided much information on the location of nuclear power plants around the world. The maps only showed power plants and no scientific or medicinal facilities. While Japan was highly dependent on nuclear energy, France is dependent for 75%.

He also commented on the TEPCO incident at the Fukushima power plants. The zero risk safety myth was prevalent there, and it had probably been preventable. The health repercussions include thyroid complications. While the international reports state that there is no evidence leading to radiation leading to increased cancer risks, doctors at Chernobyl have said that international organizations don't want to see the local facts on the ground.

I asked him about the storage of debris, since Fukushima town has had much difficulty in finding temporary storage 1-2 meter below ground for the cleanup activities. He explained how while this was an issue, it was not the real problem Japan has to face. It is necessary to find an interim nuclear facility but also a spent fuel facility. Other materials are a much larger issue than the soil/leaves in the towns. No location has been found for these higher radiated materials yet. The hardest part is the molten debris inside the reactors, as no one knows how much there is and how it can be removed. Robots will play a big part this cleanup, and it may take 30-40 years for a full decommission.

Finland or Sweden are storing nuclear waste at about 500 meter underground experimentally, and it is being investigated whether this is possible in Japan. However, due to the many earthquakes, there aren't many suitable locations. I then asked if there was no suitable location in Japan, perhaps another country or place could be found. Apparently some countries have been considered already. Russia was quick to welcome all nuclear debris on the condition that the equipment that generated it came from Russia. The Australian ambassador stated 'don't even think about it', when asked if they would consider aiding Japan. Mongolia is still under consideration.

It is clear that nuclear debris is a problem of the entire world, not just of a single country. The global community has yet to objectively find a solution for this, regardless of the origin or storage location of the debris. I think we can only move forward when we start to think of these problems globally, and with a future time frame in mind, rather than purely based on national resources and legislation, and historic relationships. In any case, Mongolia would be a lot closer (3000 km vs. 7000 km), reducing the length of transportation risks by 57%.

Monday, October 28, 2013

News in Japan - October

GEJET

Japan

USA

Netherlands

Other

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Do you know where your nearest earthquake proof shelter in Tsukuba is?

In follow up to the last post about earthquake proof shelters, here is some additional information.

I have prepared a google earth file showing all the locations of the shelters mentioned in the the table provided by Tsukuba city hall. First find the shelter closest to your house. Then use the table to determine whether or not the shelter is earthquake proof. This is denoted by o (yes) or x (no) in the column marked 耐震性の判定.

You can also find the construction year in Japanese years (s for showa emperor period, h for heisei) in the column marked  建築年. You can see that from showa 57, or 1982, the building code changed from old to new. It is not clear what the difference is between the old and new building codes from this table.

But why not also find the shelter closest to your work, or along the road to work? Please also remember if you have to go to a(n earthquake proof) shelter, there might not be sufficient facilities. You should always bring your own medication or additional items in case of e.g. pregnancy, and take in mind that the shelter might not be able to house your pet(s). Prepare a bag with items to bring to the shelter today, so you are not caught unprepared during the stressful period of a severe earthquake.

Earthquake proof shelters in Tsukuba

In response to the news that only 56% of all evacuation shelters in Japan are earthquake proof, I asked the Tsukuba city hall which evacuation centers in Tsukuba were earthquake proof. I was sent an abundance of information, mainly in Japanese. The website provides among others an overview of each shelter (school) and the earthquake proof status.

They further explained:
Mainly primary and junior high schools are designated as the evacuation shelters.
The designated 16 primary schools, 15 junior schools, 16 kindergartens, the day care centers, the children’s halls and the social welfare centers are all checked for earthquake resistance. Some of the buildings which were not strong enough for earthquakes have been already strengthened or scheduled to be strengthened by the 2015 fiscal year. Please note that the schools as evacuation centers are controlled and maintained by each school.

So in 1.5 years at least in Tsukuba all the shelters will be compliant to the standards of earthquake proof buildings. I asked the assistance of a Japanese co-worker in translating the information and finding an actual 100% earthquake proof shelter (if such a thing is possible), near my house, so we wouldn't end up going to a not-or less earthquake proof shelter. The ensuing conversation proves I am in Japan.

Co-worker: "You know, the earthquake may not happen for a long time."
Me: "Or it could happen today. It is the 'statistical reality'."
Co-worker, after a dramatic silence: "...I have lived long enough..."

(At this point I'm disturbing other people as I cry out what a horrible thing it is to say...)

Let's not forget the news from 1.5 years ago: "The earthquake research institute at Tokyo University said that in the worst case, a quake of magnitude 7 would hit the southern part of metropolitan Tokyo by 2016, while the chances of a similar disaster occurring within 30 years are as high as 98%. The government, by contrast, estimates the possibility of an earthquake that size striking the capital at 70% in the next three decades."

I'm still trying to find out any scientific arguments why the government prefers to have a 30% chance of no earthquake over 2%.

Original news article from the Yomiuri Shimbun, October 11 2013:
Only about half of the designated evacuation sites in 44 prefectures are quake-resistant, according to a survey conducted by the Board of Audit. Out of the 90,262 shelters designated by 1,615 municipalities, 50,964, or 56.5 percent, could adequately withstand earthquakes, the board said Wednesday. The survey did not cover Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures.
The survey has brought to the fore questions regarding the resistance of evacuation centers, as about 44 percent of them are not well prepared for secondary damage caused by aftershocks. Yet many people are expected to stay at such shelters if there is a massive quake, such as a Nankai Trough earthquake or a quake directly under the metropolitan area. Public facilities such as school buildings and community centers are designated as evacuation centers based on a regional disaster prevention plan mapped out by each municipal government.

The board, which received a request from the Diet to inspect the antiquake measures implemented at such shelters, conducted an oral survey of the local governments. The rate of earthquake-proofed school buildings has increased to 85.5 percent. The Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry aims to complete reinforcing the school buildings against earthquakes by fiscal 2015.

However, reinforcement against seismic activities at other evacuation shelters such as community centers and assembly halls has not made much progress. In this area, the quake-proofing rate remained at less than 60 percent. By municipalities, 73.8 percent of shelters in ordinance-designated cities, 57.5 percent in other cities and wards and 49.3 percent in towns and villages are resistant to seismic shocks. The results show that towns and villages are far behind in taking measures compared to urban districts.

Meanwhile, among 1,615 municipalities, only 37.2 percent, or 600, have mapped out a manual on how to operate an evacuation center, such as what kind of arrangements for daily life should be made there. While 94.7 percent of ordinance-designated cities have drawn up their own manuals, only 21 percent of towns and villages have done so.


After the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011, hygiene problems in such places as restroom facilities and supply shortages cropped up at many shelters. The Cabinet Office, which has held meetings to improve the living environment at evacuation centers since October last year, compiled a report in March asking local governments to create manuals, set up guidelines to operate evacuation centers and explain how they plan to cope with issues that may occur at the shelters.




Sunday, October 6, 2013

Tsukuba city disaster drill 2013

While I always wanted to research how an emergency drill would function for people with disabilities, I had to forego this chance exactly because of the disability.

Tsukuba city had its annual disaster drill this Sunday. Due to typhoon 22, it was raining earlier that week on Wednesday morning, when I optimistically rushed outside in my rain suit. I went down the stairs faster than expected as I had slipped half way through, falling on my hand and back. I merrily avoided a scaphoid fracture. However in combination with the program I started to follow this month on Saturdays in Tokyo, it proved to be too much to also visit the drill this year. So instead, here is a movie of me in action last year.

Information:

Disaster Drill for Foreigners of Tsukuba
Disaster Drill will be provided for foreign residents.
Date & Time: Sunday, 6 October 8:30 - 12:00
Location: The entrance of the City Hall
Language: There will be interpreters for some languages.
Applicants: 30 people
Application: Apply by calling ore e-mail before the event.
Contact: Tsukuba International Association
phone:029-869-7675
            e-mail: ohki@inter.or.jp

Thank you and we hope the drill will give you good hints.


Monday, September 30, 2013

News in Japan - September

GEJET
TEPCO discovers pipe leaking radioactive water at Fukushima plant
The leaking pipe was found to be dripping one drop about every 90 seconds, the company said. Workers tightened 12 bolts to stop the leak and bolstered the repair using special material and plastic tape.

Japan

Netherlands


USA

Other



Monday, September 9, 2013

Another small pheasant warning

Again I was cycling through the fields when the pheasants, and even a lone crow, started crying. It did not last very long and seemed less panicked than the previous time. I saw no obvious effects of an earthquake, but with last week fresh in mind, upon arriving at work I checked the JMA records to find that indeed, another small earthquake had occurred. I am seriously considering pheasants as an early warning system, or to check whether other animals with less obnoxious mating calls can perform the same.



Wednesday, September 4, 2013

More tornadoes in Tochigi prefecture

As tropical storm Toraji is hitting western Japan, today more tornadoes occurred in Tochigi prefecture: Kanuma, Shioya, and Yaita town were affected.

Embedded image permalink


Images. Fuji News Network has a video. No casualties have been reported so far, but 600 houses have no power.

The Japanese word for tornado is 竜巻 (tatsumaki). While there is no English page on the JMA concerning tornadoes, there are records of them across country since 1961. Anything higher than what is now classified as F1 is still rare. Here are some figures from Ibaraki prefecture. Looks like JMA will have no trouble acquiring funding for the new radar development.

Another earthquake warning by pheasants

This morning there was an earthquake. I did not notice it myself, but the pheasants did. I was on my bicycle out in the fields when it occured.

It is not their mating season, so I was highly surprised to hear them cry out in panic for as long as they did. Unlike the previous earthquake where I heard them scream (December 7, 2012), this was a very long lasting screaming, for well over a minute. I immediately checked the power lines for swaying, but there was nothing out of the ordinary. Being a rainy day, there were no farmers out in the fields or other people walking around to verify if they were experiencing an earthquake. I thought it must be something else that had startled them. I was wrong.



There had been an earthquake, magnitude 6.9, but only shindou 3 in our area. Apparently it was very long lasting, coming from such a depth (400 km). The pheasants have proved accurate earthquake alarms once again, even if shindou 3 is not noticeable on a bicycle.



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Tornadoes in Noda (Chiba prefecture) and Koshigaya (Saitama prefecture)

Noda (30 km from Tsukuba) and Koshigaya (40 km from Tsukuba) experienced tornadoes on September 2nd. Unlike the Hojo tornado in May 2012, which even prompted the JMA to request funding for a new radar tracking clouds every 10 seconds, nobody died.

Previously we had visited the monument of the Dutch civil engineer Rouwenhorst Mulder near the canal he built, close to Noda city. The images now give a different impression. As of now, in both areas combined 67 people are injured and 550 buildings damaged. Some buildings still risk collapsing and 5 shelters are operating.

From the NHK:


Low storm cloud caused tornado
A meteorologist says a tornado that hit parts of eastern Japan on Monday was produced by a supercell -- a thunderstorm containing rotating updrafts of air -- that formed much closer to the ground than usual.

Japan's National Defense Academy Professor Fumiaki Kobayashi said he studied footage of the tornado captured in the Saitama and Chiba prefectures.

The professor said the cloud developed as low as 500 meters from the ground. Such clouds usually form at twice that height.

He said a funnel-shaped airstream appeared under the cloud and grew to at least 100 meters wide.
Kobayashi said the cloud was so large that it maintained power even when the storm lost energy due to rainfall.

He said people in the tornado-hit areas must have thought they could touch the dark cloud. He urged people to be cautious of supercell clouds as they can be a sign that a tornado is coming.




Update: 64 people injured, over 600 houses damaged. More news and videos here



At the end of this video there is a commentary by Dr. Takeshi Maesaka, senior researcher of the storm, flood and landslide research unit, monitoring and forecast research department of the NIED in Tsukuba. He gave us a lecture and visit to the radar analysis room at a field trip October 30th, 2012


Saturday, August 31, 2013

News in Japan - August

GEJET

Japan

Netherlands

USA

Social

Other areas


Highlights: 
The current five-day school week began on a once-a-month trial basis in September 1992, and was increased to twice a month in fiscal 1995. The five-day school week was fully implemented in fiscal 2002. However, education experts have blamed the five-day school week for deteriorating scores among students. They also said students are not spending their Saturdays as initially envisioned, such as participating in community activities.

The Japan Meteorological Agency plans to develop a new weather radar within the next five years to more accurately forecast torrential rain and tornadoes, agency officials said Tuesday.
The agency plans to request ¥995 million for the project in the fiscal 2014 budget, the officials said.
The plan follows heavy rain that hit the Chugoku and Tohoku regions this summer and a powerful tornado in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, in May 2012.
Torrential rain and tornadoes can occur with the buildup of cumulonimbus clouds. The envisioned new phased array radar, which comprises a number of small antennas lined up to emit radio waves, is able to record the movement of such clouds every 10 seconds, according to the officials.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Color vision deficiency

You may not be able to see all the text or figures on this website. I have not yet checked all pages for color vision deficiency (CVD) yet, while in fact quite a lot of people have some form of color vision deficiency. The following is based on information mainly from J-fly, an organisation involved with drosophilia melanogaster genes and therefore in need of preparing many colored images, which all people should be able to see.

How many people have colorblindness?
•The frequency of colorblindness is fairly high. One in twelve Caucasian (8%), one in 20 Asian (5%), and one in 25 African (4%) males are so-called "red-green" colorblind. It is commoner than AB blood group.

How could it affect your work related to disaster risk management?
There is a good chance that the paper you submit may go to colorblind reviewers. Supposing that your paper will be reviewed by three white males (which is not unlikely considering the current population in science), the probability that at least one of them is colorblind is whopping 22%! 
•People reading your publications or website cannot see all your text or figures.
•Flood Hazard Maps or other (disaster) maps cannot be read by all of the target audience.

•The audience of your presentation may not see what you are indicating on the slides, or when you use a red laser pointer. 

How does it work and what do people see?





What can you do?
•Choose color schemes that can be easily identified by people with all types of color vision. Keep the
number of colors to a minimum.

•Use combinations of different symbols with a few, vivid colors rather than a single symbol with various 
colors (see the example below).
Clearly state color names where users are expected to use color names in communication.
Avoid indicating objects only by color name. Make it possible to communicate without using color name. Describe shapes and positions.
Use a green laser pointer, it works for both color blind and non-color blind people.
Use a website to check if your images are visible: http://www.vischeck.com/examples/ (this site is currently down, please let me know a suitable alternative)
Test how your website appears to colorblind people: https://www.toptal.com/designers/colorfilter
Test yourself for colorblindness types: http://www.testingcolorvision.com/

Sources:
http://jfly.iam.u-tokyo.ac.jp/color/
http://www.visibone.com/colorblind/
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb263953(v=vs.85).aspx
http://www.colourblindawareness.org/colour-blindness/
wikipedia

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Presentation at the APHW Conference in Korea

Today I had a presentation at the 6th Asia Pacific Association of Hydrology and Water Resources Conference. It was held at the Korea University, in Seoul, South Korea. The presentation schedules can be viewed here.

Luckily I was accompanied by a supervisor, so we could share our astonishment on not being able to read anything around us for a change. Needless to say, the conference was excellently organized and surprisingly, we met many people from other research institutes in Japan. The title of my presentation was 'Quantifying the effectiveness of measures taken for vulnerable people in disaster risk management (DRM) in the Netherlands'. Up to now I only have the Dutch figures to display. 
Ms. Min Young Kim commented on how to obtain responses from interviews with local people. In her research in Korea she had encountered much resistance and reluctance to discuss individual DRM measures. I am still in the process of developing these data gathering methods and was disappointed I would not be able to perform such local interviews myself. 
However, after hearing about her difficulties I reconsidered, and I believe her experience might serve as partial justification not to conduct the interviews as I had expected quite the opposite reaction from local people. 


 We had only one day to stay at the conference before flying back to Tsukuba, but we did take the opportunity to enjoy the restored inner city river, which is a popular outing place for families and young adults alike. More details of this project can be found here.