Thursday, July 31, 2014

News in Japan - July

GEJET:

Netherlands:

Japan:
Japan braces for typhoon Neoguri 55,000 people urged to evacuate U.S. officials at Kadena Air Force Base warned residents to take serious precautions. “I can’t stress enough how dangerous this typhoon may be when it hits Okinawa,” Commander James Hecker of the 18th Wing stationed in Kadena said in a statement posted online. “This is the most powerful typhoon forecast to hit the island in 15 years; we expect damaging winds to arrive by early Tuesday morning. “So be prepared!” Hecker said. “Tie down your outdoor items and work with your neighbors to help them.” He added: “During the typhoon, do not go outside… anything not tied down, even small items, could become deadly projectiles.”
Debris flow in Nagano prefecture (Japanese) – 1 death, train tracks displaced and houses destroyed
3 deaths from typhoon (Japanese): aged 12, 83 and 77 (all male)

USA:

Other:

Vulnerable people:
Improvements in life spans, education and incomes are slowing due to natural disasters, misguided government policies and worsening inequality in a world where the 85 richest people have as much wealth as the 3.5 billion poorest people, the United Nations said Thursday in its annual human development report.
“As this report says, it’s not rocket science,” UNDP head Helen Clark said in an interview before the report’s release. “Where people do address these things, development can come along very, very nicely. Where they haven’t addressed a lot of vulnerabilities and development deficits, as in Syria, it all comes spectacularly unstuck.” The UNDP report, published annually since 1990, is intended to inform and influence policy makers. Governments watch the rankings carefully, and “When they don’t do well they put a lot of pressure on us to change the rankings,” Malik said.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Friday, July 11, 2014

Heatstroke in Japan

After typhoon No. 8 has passed, summer temperatures above 30 degrees have returned. The ministry of the environment warns against heat stroke using a principle called WBGT: Wet Bulb Globe Temperature. This is an empirical index representing the heat stress to which individuals are exposed.

A paper from the end of 2011 described how different ministries are involved in heatstroke warnings:
The Ministry of the Environment has developed and distributes guidelines to prevent heat-related diseases, with specific recommendations for prevention at the local and regional levels [26]. The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare (MOHLW) also promotes preventive action on heat through health education activities and the distribution of health promotion materials. These and other national entities maintain websites on the prevention of heat disorders. Forecasts of Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT—a widely used heat stress index) and levels of heat disorder risk are provided by the National Institute of Environmental Studies (NIES) throughout the summer via the Internet.

The ministry of the environment has published a possible heat stroke calendar, by using combined temperatures from the cities Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, Hiroshima, Fukuoka, Sapporo, Sendai and Kagoshima, with cumulative figures of the past five years in the left most column:

The number of days with high temperatures has been increasing the past years. This calendar also shows why October and May are the months which are considered to have the best seasons.

Friday, July 4, 2014

International River Basins

The UN Watercourses Convention User's Guide (2012) contains maps of all the international river basins in the world. These show where transboundary agreements exist and where they are yet to be made. Most of the information comes from Oregon State (2009).
What we really need is a global organization focused on data management, monitoring the status of international agreements on for instance river basins, but also flood occurrences and other disasters would be a welcome addition. We have several UN organizations that might be suited for this task; and choosing one sole entity may be tricky.
Another interesting point of the user guide is that three countries voted against the convention in 1997: Burundi, China and Turkey. While Turkey had clear reservations against the ambiguous descriptions of equitable and reasonable use, what constitutes no harm, and how to settle international disputes while guaranteeing sovereignty; it was not clear why the other two countries voted against the convention.